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View Full Version : New Mexico bill would force colleges to believe accusers in sexual assault proceedings



Teh One Who Knocks
01-29-2019, 12:56 PM
Greg Piper, Associate Editor - The College Fix


https://i.imgur.com/Cg1cCzj.jpg

Thought the Obama administration’s Title IX guidance for sexual misconduct proceedings was bad? Look at some of the legislation under consideration in states.

New Mexico is considering a bill that would threaten colleges with defunding if they don’t make assumptions that are favorable to accusers in sexual misconduct proceedings.

HB 133 passed the House Health and Human Services Committee Friday, and will now be considered by the House Education Committee, the Los Alamos Daily Post reports. The bill’s sponsor, Democratic Rep. Elizabeth Thomson, said it’s intended to give young people “the resources they need to make the best decisions for themselves and their bodies.”

While media coverage portrays the legislation as just another consent-oriented measure, the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education claims that HB 133 functionally bans “impartiality” in sexual misconduct proceedings.

By requiring colleges that receive state funding to implement “complainant-centered policies and procedures” and use “trauma-informed” training for campus officials, the bill incentivizes proceedings that are inherently biased against accused students, Tyler Coward, legislative counsel to FIRE, wrote in a blog post last week.

Not only would “complainant-centered” procedures “almost certainly violate” Title IX, but the fairness of “trauma-informed” training is in serious dispute, he said.

Harvard Law School Prof. Janet Halley, for example, has publicly described her school’s training as “100% aimed to convince [adjudication staff] to believe complainants, precisely when they seem unreliable and incoherent.” The assumptions behind trauma-informed training have little if any support in scientific research, according to memory and neuroscience experts interviewed by journalist Emily Yoffe.

The bill also defines “harassment” through the state’s penal code. That’s dangerous, Coward said, because if the definition is used “against speech in the educational setting,” it would preempt the specific Supreme Court standard devised for student-on-student harassment, known as Davis.

FIRE’s other problems with the bill track with the group’s longstanding opposition to affirmative-consent policies, which often prevent parties from being able to prove their received “continuous” consent or unambiguous consent at every “stage” in a sexual encounter.

Coward also scolds the bill for using the Obama administration’s mandated evidence standard, “preponderance,” which does not recognize the severity of potential consequences for an accused person. The “clear and convincing” evidence standard is better for sexual misconduct proceedings, and is explicitly recommended by the Supreme Court for “quasi-criminal” allegations that would result in more than the “mere loss of money.”

RBP
01-29-2019, 01:52 PM
I thought we were over this absurdity. Apparently not. Why Obama set up universities as a shadow court system in the first place is beyond comprehension.

We have a court system, New Mexico. If there's a claim of a sexual assault refer it there. Done. Boy, that was difficult to solve, eh?

Teh One Who Knocks
01-29-2019, 01:52 PM
#BelieveAllWomen

RBP
01-29-2019, 02:01 PM
#BelieveAllWomen

What scary is that saying no to that is consider a fringe position.

PorkChopSandwiches
01-29-2019, 04:17 PM
Guilty until proven innocent

RBP
01-29-2019, 04:29 PM
Guilty until proven innocent

For cishet white guys anyway.

Teh One Who Knocks
01-29-2019, 07:25 PM
For cishet white guys anyway.

Because being born that way makes you automatically guilty of everything :nono: