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Scholars taking a closer look at elitist feminist attack on “innocent until proven guilty”

June 15, 2013
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innocent

NCFM NOTE: Below is an excellent must read article from The Community of the Falsely Accused. Here’s how it works, in small part anyway: after convincing one or two willing legislators and a handful of journalists that a problem exists elitist feminist have laws written to suit their beliefs which are supported by not much more than “I want it.” They scream, threaten, and otherwise coerce acquiescence until they get what they want. Here, over the years, they wanted watered down and aggressively expanded definitions of sexual assault until almost all unwanted behavior could be construed as a criminal offense. We received a phone call this week from the grandmother of a young man incarcerated for the last six months because they cannot afford bail. He was incarcerated because several weeks after ending a relationship with a young woman he was accused by her of rape. Her claim? The sex was consensual but during the act she asked three times for him to stop. By her own admission her fear came out as whispers. Now the entire weight of the criminal justice system is bearing down on this young man for a he said she said. There is absolutely no evidence to support the young woman’s claim which the young man denies. How can such a thing happen in America? What happened to innocent until proven guilty? How is it that a young man with no criminal history can be incarcerated for six months without bail? This absurd scenario of injustice is just one of many that play out in America every day. If nothing else, it seems that he should be released OR (on his own recognizance) pending disposition of his case.  Don’t stay silent. Don’t just read about things like this. Get up, get out, and so something about it or you too may find being innocent is not enough to keep you free.

The tide is turning: serious legal writing takes issue with the assault on the rights of the presumptively innocent in campus sex charges

For several decades, serious legal writing on sexual assault has been dominated by scholars fervently advocating for fewer protections for the presumptively innocent in favor of more convictions. The pendulum had shifted so far in favor of victim’s rights, and away from the rights of the presumptively innocent, that observers wondered when it would start to glide back somewhere toward the middle.

The Department of Education’s infamous 2011 “Dear Colleague” letter might have been the tipping point. There has been a noticeable shift in serious legal scholarship taking issue with the attack on the rights of the presumptively innocent accused of sex offenses on American campuses. The critics of the trend to diminish the rights of the presumptively innocent can no longer be considered outliers.

One of the most prominent voices taking issue is that of Professor Dan Subotnik. Subotnik doesn’t shy away from openly talking about the “Groupthink in which white males become the reviled community” on campus. Dan Subotnik, The Duke Rape Case Five Years Later: Lessons for the Academy, the Media, and the Criminal Justice System, 45 Akron L. Rev. 883, 891 (2011).  Prof. Subotnik pointed out that the Department of Education’s “Dear Colleague” letter presents a double-edged sword:

More malefactors will be expelled from schools under this standard, and that is to the good; but would the Duke accused have had any chance of justice under a lower evidentiary standard for complainants that trumpeted the special heinousness of sexual assault? Or under the standard at Princeton where guilt can be found if the woman is merely “under the influence” of alcohol? Or the standard, in effect at Stanford, under which those judging the case are instructed that a “neutral stand” between complainant and accused is tantamount to siding with the abusive partner and that they should be “very, very cautious in in accepting a man’s claim that he has been wrongly accused of abuse or violence” because “[t]he great majority of allegations of abuse. . . are substantially accurate”?

Id. at 920.

Happily, Prof. Subotnik is not a lone voice crying in the wilderness. Stephen Henrick has written a wonderful law review article called A Hostile Environment for Student Defendants: Title IX and Sexual Assault on College Campuses for the Northern Kentucky Law Review, 40 N. Ky. L. Rev. 49 (2013). It is reprinted here, and it is must-reading. Among other things, Henrick notes: “Justifying institutionalized unfairness to a given defendant in the exercise of power because of a perceived need to reform a broader social problem is contrary to the very idea of civilized justice. . . . Even if sexual assault is as underreported as complainant advocates claim, 174 and while recognizing that sexual violence is reprehensible, convicting the innocent to atone for society’s sins or to bring about change remains an unjustifiable use of authority and a dangerous judicial precedent.” Id. at 87. He also posits:

Critics of changing the present system often argue that instances of false or mistaken accusations are not frequent enough to require colleges to burden meritorious complaints with excessive due process hurdles to overcome. Upon closer examination, such an argument made alongside the claim that sexual violence on campus is grossly underreported contradictorily posits that complainants are very often wrong in claiming they have not been raped, while rarely incorrect in claiming that they have been raped.
Although it is true that society should strive to make justice readily available for rape victims, the argument that alleged victims are rarely incorrect cannot support the current college adjudication system. The most obvious problem is that because the precise rate of false or mistaken reporting is unknowable, the argument has no empirical support. In addition, it is indisputable that false complaints do happen: using OCR’s “preponderance of the evidence” standard in determining whether probable cause exists, police concluded in 2010 and 2011 alone that a university complainant makes a false rape allegation more than once per calendar month. Relying on the good faith or accuracy of complaints does not protect the innocent in these situations, regardless of how often they happen.
Id. at 88-89.

In addition, Barclay Sutton Hendrix has written a great piece for the Georgia Law Review: Note, A Feather on One Side, A Brick on the Other: Tilting the Scales Against Males Accused of Sexual Assault in Campus Disciplinary Proceedings, 47 Ga. L. Rev. 591 (2013):

A balance must be struck between protecting victims of sexual assault and protecting students accused of assault who, if innocent, are themselves victims. Appropriate procedural due process protections during campus disciplinary hearings can strike this balance. But this cannot be accomplished until universities are allowed to use a higher burden of proof than preponderance of the evidence, students are allowed to cross-examine their accusers, and the system does not allow for appeals by accusers. Until that time, OCR’s newest requirements for grievance procedures will continue to make it far too likely that those accused of sexual assault-who are disproportionately male-will not only have their reputations destroyed, . . . but worse still may be found guilty for what is really consensual sexual conduct.

Id. at 621.

There are good reasons . . . however, to doubt the existence of an epidemic of campus sexual assaults, despite the significant amount of attention paid to it. A closer look at the studies claiming a crises-level of collegiate sexual assaults reveals their dubiousness. For instance, one study that claims 90% of collegiate rapes go unreported explained that this was partly because the victims did not see the supposed assault as harmful or did not think that a crime had been committed. In other words, the rapes were not reported because, despite the researchers’ categorization of the incidents as rapes, the individuals actually involved did not view them as such. Consequently, one of the most criticized aspects of sexual assault studies is the definition used to determine what constitutes an “assault.”
Consider the study cited in a recent “Dear Colleague” letter issued on behalf of the Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights (OCR). That study’s definition of “rape” included “forced kissing” and “attempted forced kissing” as well as automatically counted any sexual contact with someone when they were unable to give consent because of intoxication or incapacity as “rape” or “assault.” But the intoxication-or-incapacity question was framed in such a way that it likely included many gray areas: “Has someone had sexual contact with you when you were unable to provide consent or stop what was happening because you were passed out, drugged, drunk, incapacitated, or asleep?” One critic of the study explained why this question is unclear: “Does ‘unable to provide consent or stop’ refer to actual incapacitation- given as only one option in the question-or impaired judgment?” Another critic opined, “If sexual intimacy under the influence of alcohol is by definition assault, then a significant percentage of sexual intercourse throughout the world and down the ages qualifies as crime.”
Bolstering the argument that overbroad definitions of sexual assault and ambiguous survey questions have greatly exaggerated the prevalence of sexual assaults is the fact that only 2% of the survey’s respondents who reported being sexually assaulted while incapacitated also reported experiencing any emotional or psychological trauma. Given how low this percentage was, the authors of the report asserted that the percentage was actually much higher. Most victims of sexual violence suffer from posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in the aftermath of their attack. Between one-half to two-thirds of victims develop PTSD post-attack, and the adverse effects can, and often do, last for years. As noted above, college students often do not report or classify their experience as sexual assault. And while some studies suggest that victims who do not acknowledge their victim-status suffer less negative consequences from their attack, other studies have found that as many as 30% of these victims suffer from PTSD. Given the prevalence of emotional and psychological trauma following both acknowledged and unacknowledged sexual assaults, one would expect the disruptive effects of sexual violence to be widespread on collegiate campuses if an epidemic existed, even if reports of the violence are not.

Id. at 596-97.

Ryan Ellis has also taken the “Dear Colleague” letter to task. See Ryan Ellis, Mandating Injustice: The Preponderance of the Evidence Mandate Creates a New Threat to Due Process on Campus, 32 Rev. Litig. 65, 90 (2013), where he writes that the Department of Education “would be well advised to temporarily cease enforcement of the mandate and subject it to comment by the affected public. A well-documented public dialogue could help the agency formulate better solutions to the sexual harassment and sexual assault problems found on college campuses – solutions that also pose less danger to student rights.”

innocent

Innocent until proven guilty. The search for the truth. Second waive feminist’s say there’s more than one truth. Really?

One Response to Scholars taking a closer look at elitist feminist attack on “innocent until proven guilty”

  1. Ivan on June 19, 2013 at 11:09 AM

    Sorry gays I’m off topic but you have to see this Joe Rogan guy is amazing !!! This is a old staff but is classic video – Joe puts the Feminist in here place – – We need more men like him —– http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3lXUd7VxuSA

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