Yeah, who cares about things like laws and due process? This is long but read it all.

David Hookstead of the College Fix reports.

Students accused of rape have too many rights, say some at campus rape panel

A “Confronting Campus Rape” discussion at the University of Wisconsin-Madison on Monday night delved into the rights of the accused versus the rights of the accuser, a panel discussion during which participants suggested campus rape victims are largely mistreated and dismissed.

Some in the audience even suggested that the accused should not be innocent until proven guilty, and the emotionally charged talk included suggestions by UW-Madison professor Anne McClintock that “men on campus … are at greater risk of being assaulted on campus than they are of being falsely accused of a rape” and that “this university does expel students for plagiarism, but not for rape.”

A UW-Madison student on the panel who described herself as a rape survivor said she had, however, successfully gotten the first male student ever expelled from UW-Madison for rape.

Monday’s “Confronting Campus Rape” panel aimed to tackle the controversial topic of sexual assault on campus and “reframe the debate, discussing university culture and policy, pedagogy, and student experience through the lens of feminist philosophy, legal theory, and studies of sexuality and power,” according to the event’s official description.

McClintock is an English and women’s and gender studies professor at the university who has given many keynote lectures on the intersections of sexuality, race, gender, nationalism and imperialism, according to her online faculty profile. Additional panelists included philosophy professor Claudia Card and law professor Cecelia Klingele.

During the discussion, the rights of the accused were often called into question. All the panel members initially stated that people accused of crimes should have some rights, but that message quickly lost ground as the event unfolded.

The student who said she was raped described herself as “horrified” to discover that her accused rapist was given rights of due process from the university. She also claimed that a UW-Madison dean informed her that the system is set up to protect the rights of the accused, but declined to name the administrator who made these comments.

The rights the student said she was troubled to learn of can be found in Chapter 17 of the UW-Madison Student Nonacademic Misconduct Policy. They include the right to a hearing and the right to have a written summary of allegations from the accuser.

The student said she does not support these rights and added: “This policy needs to be rewritten by the students, for the students to heal what is broken in order to seek full accountability.”

The fact that she was required to write a statement of accusations toward her alleged rapist, but he was not required to speak in his defense, was another problem the student said she had with UW-Madison’s policies.

“This put me at an obvious disadvantage,” she said.

In criminal court and university statutes, individuals accused of a crime have the right to remain silent. The student panelist and others in the crowd voiced concern over this idea.


 
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