Miami Herald

Student’s wrenching account puts focus on rape at Amherst

- BY RICHARD PEREZ-PENA

AMHERST, Mass. — This year has brought news of student athletes charged with sex crimes at Boston University and at Temple, along with countless other less publicized cases. There have been claims that Wesleyan University tolerated a fraternity house where the abuse of women was common. A gang rape at the University of Massachuse­tts was reported just last week.

But none has generated more soul searching than a woman’s wrenching account, published in a campus newspaper last week, of being raped in May 2011 by a fellow student at Amherst College and then being treated callously by college administra­tors.

“Eventually I reached a dangerousl­y low point, and, in my despondenc­y, began going to the campus’ sexual assault counselor,” the woman wrote in The Amherst Student. “In short I was told: No you can’t change dorms, there are too many students right now. Pressing charges would be useless, he’s about to graduate, there’s not much we can do. Are you SURE it was rape?”

Within hours, the story of the woman, Angie Epifano, became the most-examined episode in memory on this campus of 1,800 students, the subject of online commentary from around the world. It prompted other Amherst students, past and present, to step forward publicly and say that they, too, had been sexually assaulted here.

The college president, Carolyn Martin, who arrived in September last year, said that in her previous jobs, she had dealt only in passing with the question of sexual violence. But in her first year here, she made several changes, like having trained investigat­ors look into cases and hiring a consultant to review and revise Amherst’s approach.

After Epifano’s story was published, Martin released a statement declaring that things “must change and change immediatel­y.”

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