ecasadoSBU wrote:TAMU Eagle wrote:
Universities can't just expel students for being accused, that's a massive violation of their Title IX rights and due process rights. The university must prove that a student violated one of their student rules and that is was a serious enough violation that it warranted an expulsion. There would have been an investigation, a hearing, and an opportunity for appeal. You didn't hear about it because the information is protected by FERPA, a federal privacy law. Universities can't share students' private information, such as rules they are accused of breaking or why they are being expelled.
Universities have their own set of rules, usually called a "student code of conduct." These rules cover everything from making too much noise in the dorm all the way up to murder. If a student breaks a student rule, the university will investigate, judge, and sanction a student in a process separate from the legal process. If the broken university rule was also potentially a violation of criminal law, then law enforcement will run its own process concurrently. Sometimes the two processes come to the same conclusion, other times one finds the student guilty while the other one doesn't.
In Mo's case, law enforcement dropped the charges but the university found him responsible (guilty) and expelled him. There are two likely reasons for the different outcomes. 1. Law enforcement uses a higher standard of proof than the university. DAs typically only bring things to trial when they think they can win a case. 2. Nebraska's definition of sexual assault and Creighton's definition of sexual assault are different. I don't know the specifics in Nebraska but I know a lot of states have outdated definitions of sexual assault. For example, in some states a rape can only happen when a man attacks a woman. If a woman attacks a man, man attacks another man, or woman attacks another woman, they technically can't be charged with rape in some states because of the state's definition. So what Mo was accused of might not have violated Nebraska's definition of sexual assault, but it may have violated Creighton's definition of sexual assault.
Thanks for your thorough explanation. A lot of the details I did not understand. I see and understand your point. I was solely seeing it from a criminal perspective.
mel ott wrote:Could the admin. please start a separate off topic thread for things that don't have anything to do with Big East Basketball. If people want to talk social issues, politics, or other non bball issues that would be nice. That way, those who signed up to just view Big East bball threads would be happy and people who want to discuss their philosophies and legal opinions on various topics could have a separate site. I don't know how we get this many pages on a topic where very few know what really happened or the decisions made. #go big east
NJRedman wrote:mel ott wrote:Could the admin. please start a separate off topic thread for things that don't have anything to do with Big East Basketball. If people want to talk social issues, politics, or other non bball issues that would be nice. That way, those who signed up to just view Big East bball threads would be happy and people who want to discuss their philosophies and legal opinions on various topics could have a separate site. I don't know how we get this many pages on a topic where very few know what really happened or the decisions made. #go big east
Oh so a issue involving the Creighton Basketball coach isn't basketball related? If you don't want to read it then don't read it.
Lots of apologists here.
mel ott wrote:NJRedman wrote:mel ott wrote:Could the admin. please start a separate off topic thread for things that don't have anything to do with Big East Basketball. If people want to talk social issues, politics, or other non bball issues that would be nice. That way, those who signed up to just view Big East bball threads would be happy and people who want to discuss their philosophies and legal opinions on various topics could have a separate site. I don't know how we get this many pages on a topic where very few know what really happened or the decisions made. #go big east
Oh so a issue involving the Creighton Basketball coach isn't basketball related? If you don't want to read it then don't read it.
Lots of apologists here.
LIghten up Francis. I suggested that an off topic sticky thread be established for off topics items such as this. A picture of the CU basketball coach giving a ring to a player-no I don't see how that is basketball related. Find me the basketball related views in this thread. Again, what's the problem having off topic items?
[/quote]Savannah Jay wrote:Disagree with much of the "detail" that TAMU Eagle to infer about Watson's case and Creighton. For starters, Creighton's code of conduct doesn't say anything about loud music in the dorms or murder. It's far more vague (and i'd be willing to bet the other schools in the BE have similar vagueness) and allows the hearing board huge latitude when a student's conduct is brought into question. The panel is 3 faculty and 3 students and they can choose to expel a student for simply failing to adhere to the four principles of the Creighton code of conduct:
1. Act with professional, academic, and personal integrity
2. Respect and promote the dignity of all persons
3. Respect the policies of the Creighton University community and the rights of its members both on and off the campus, as well as the just laws of the civic community and the rights of its members
4. Support the personal, professional, academic, and vocational development of the Creighton University community.
So the panel could, just on the face of the allegations, say that Watson failed to respect the dignity of all persons or the rights of a member of the Creighton community and expel him without even knowing all the details of that evening. Creighton's code of conduct specifically states that it is not a formal process and has nothing to do with civil or criminal law.
On the legal side, dropping the charges has absolutely nothing to do with what constitutes rape in Nebraska. The prosecutors had issues with the victim's credibility. Specifically:
1. She claimed she was a virgin, yet tested positive for a sexually transmitted disease whose incubation period made it impossible for her to have contracted it on the evening in question.
2. She had performed sex acts on Watson in the past.
3. The woman fondled and was fondled by a friend of Watson's in a car (with another person present) while traveling from the bar to the apartment where the alleged assault happened (this fact came to light later because she did not tell the police about the encounter and is ultimately what led to the charges being dropped).
Based on this information, prosecutors did not believe they would move forward and prove sexual assault. Creighton and its panel, given its a private Catholic university, could have expelled him simply if he told the panel everything that happened between her and the girl. And now I am speculating but, for example, if the previous sex acts happened on campus they could decide that conduct when combined with the allegation was enough to expel him.
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