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by wildmusings
3110 days ago
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Read the document I linked to see just how much of a joke those procedures were. That letter was signed by law professors ranging from extremely liberal to extremely conservative, so there was nothing ideological about their conclusions. The stakes in a Title IX suit are not really lower in reality, if they are in theory. First, a senior expelled from a private university in their fourth year has been deprived of 1) over $200,000 spent towards a diploma they will now never receive, 2) the opportunity cost of four years of their life, 3) enormous lost future income, as they are now excluded from most professional positions, and 4) other reputational damage resulting from an adjudication that they committed sexual assault. It is an extremely rare civil suit that can actually have such catastrophic consequences for someone's life. |
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I don't think(?) that marcoperaza is saying that Title IX courts should have the same rules and procedures as a criminal court. It's acceptable to have a lower standard of evidence and, to a degree, relaxes rules of procedure. Especially if these rule changes are paired with limitations on penalties: as rayiner suggests no punitive punishment, just expulsion (which I agree is serious) and sealed records.
Similarly I would bet that tptacek & rayiner would agree that in some cases Title IX courts got a little off the rails with their procedures: possibly lowering the standard of evidence below "preponderance of evidence" to just "some evidence at all" or maybe in some of the worst cases "just an accusation." In addition the methods of defense left to the accused were probably not sufficient in some cases. Their ability to view and present evidence and witnesses was overly curtailed and that needs to be fixed.