ecasadoSBU wrote:TAMU Eagle wrote:ecasadoSBU wrote:if Watson wasn't found guilty and the charges were dropped, then whats the big deal of giving him a ring like everyone else on the team? He is a young man and got kicked off his team due to allegations that were later dropped. That's pretty messed up. How do you make that up to him? All that lost time and exclusion from the program...
The Anti Sexual Violence ladies should have the right to express themselves publicly about the matter... That's fine. But I find them pretty f'cked up for criticizing McD because he sent a ring to Watson when the charges were dropped.
The charges were dropped in the legal process.
He was found responsible (guilty) by the university process. As far as the university is concerned, he committed a sexual assault.
This is pretty common. The state definition of sexual assault and the university definition of sexual assault are often two different things. Universities have a right to hold their students to higher standards than the state does. Universities also have a lower burden of proof than the state does.
what process?
I never heard the University going through a process. it was never even written about. You are either guilty or not guilty. It would be unfair of the University to find someone guilty when they don't have proof. Again, you are messing up a young student-athlete's life based on allegations with no proof... so wrong!
I think they just kicked him out proactively to avoid potential sanctions.
NJRedman wrote:cujaysfan wrote:NJRedman wrote:
It was in the student newspaper, thats freedom of the press. I guess that doesn't count when it's critical of the Blue Jays huh?
congrats on your equally brain dead response
we got some real legal scholars round these parts
And we got the same types of fans like PSU, Notre Dame, Baylor and Oklahoma! Congrats on your tone deaf response.
cujaysfan wrote:NJRedman wrote:cujaysfan wrote:And we got the same types of fans like PSU, Notre Dame, Baylor and Oklahoma! Congrats on your tone deaf response.
1. i haven't said anything one way or another about watson or CU's handling about this one - your inference of such belies your prejudices
2. both freedom of the press and free speech are in relation to protection from the government
cujaysfan wrote:Clearly you don’t need my assistance pointing out how dim you are – you’re doing a fine job of that yourself
Any eighth grader with a rudimentary understanding of our rights and the constitution knows the difference between your notion of “FREEDOM OF THE PRESS!!” and trying to apply that to a student newspaper run by a private institution and how it’s different than an employee vs employer relationship vis a vis a citizen/reporter vs the government.
And again – you keep making inferences about my being a ‘homer’ and being ok with “covering up a crime’ are simply things you’ve fabricated out of thin air – as again I haven’t said anything about Watson’s actions nor Creighton’s handling of anything pertaining to this situation.
I certainly know quite a bit more about this situation than you do. And I certainly know less about it than CU’s administration. At this point I’m content to let the situation play out before I may or may not comment on it.
So keep blathering away with your ridiculous indignation – you’re only embarrassing yourself.
MarquetteRustler wrote:I think Watson should sue the university and their kangaroo court that expelled him.
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.
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