The allegations made in the latest issue of Rolling Stone
are shocking. An 18-year-old University of Virginia freshman attends a
party at one of the school's oldest fraternities in the fall of 2012.
"Jackie", as she is called in the article, is invited upstairs by her
date, where she says she is gang raped by seven fraternity brothers.
Jackie didn't go to a hospital after the alleged incident, as
her friends decided it would adversely affect her- and their -
reputations at the school. In 2013, the story continues, Jackie reported
her rape to the head of the school's misconduct board, Nicole Eramo.
Jackie was presented with the choice of going to the police,
beginning a formal complaint or having a mediated session where she
could confront her alleged attackers.
"Setting aside for a moment the absurdity of a school
offering to handle the investigation and adjudication of a felony sex
crime - something Title IX requires, but which no university on Earth is
equipped to do - the sheer menu of choices, paired with the reassurance
that any choice is the right one, often has the end result of coddling
the victim into doing nothing," the article's author, Sabrina Rubin
Erdely, writes.
Jackie decided she couldn't go forward.
Sabrina Rubin Erdely
Rolling Stone
"She badly wants to muster the courage to file criminal charges or even a civil case," Erdley says. "But she's paralysed."
The Rolling Stone story expands beyond the one allegation and
its subsequent fallout and looks at how the university has handled
suspected rape cases over the past decades - including multiple
allegations of gang rapes at the fraternity in question, Phi Kappa Psi.
Last year, the school discloses, there were 38 reports of
sexual assault. Nine became formal complaints, and four resulted in
misconduct board hearings. "The other 29 students evaporated," Erdely
writes.
She adds that 14 students have been found guilty of "sexual
misconduct" in the school's history, but none has been expelled.
According to Erdely, the most recent student, found to have been
responsible for multiple assaults, was suspended for one year.
When Erdely asked university president Teresa Sullivan why
the university keeps its rape disciplinary proceedings private, she said
it would discourage women from coming forward. Jackie tells Rolling
Stone she was told by the dean that it's "because nobody wants to send
their daughter to the rape school".
"At UVA, rapes are kept quiet, both by students - who brush
off sexual assaults as regrettable but inevitable casualties of their
cherished party culture - and by an administration that critics say is
less concerned with protecting students than it is with protecting its
own reputation from scandal," Erdely writes.
The University of Virginia is one of 86 schools currently
under investigation by the Obama administration's Department of
Education for their handling of sexual-assault-related complaints. It's
also one of 12 schools undergoing a more thorough "compliance review" of
its policies for dealing with sexual assault on campus.
Fallout from the Rolling Stone article has been swift.
Initially, the school placed Phi Kappa Psi "under investigation". The
federal judge originally named to head the inquest was later withdrawn after word spread that he was a member of the fraternity in question.
As outrage mounted, the fraternity voluntarily suspended itself during the proceedings.
In a letter to the Virginia student paper, the fraternity
said it had "no specific knowledge" of the magazine's claims, but it
would co-operate with authorities.
"Make no mistake, the acts depicted in the article are beyond
unacceptable - they are vile and intolerable in our brotherhood, our
university community and our society," the letter states.
On Saturday Sullivan announced that she was suspending all
fraternity and sorority activities - involving about 3,500 students -
until 9 January and calling on the Charlottesville, Virginia, police to
investigate Jackie's allegations.
"The wrongs described in Rolling Stone are appalling and have
caused all of us to re-examine our responsibility to this community,"
Ms Sullivan writes in a letter to students.
"Rape is an abhorrent crime that has no place in the world, let alone
on the campuses and grounds of our nation's colleges and universities."
Hundreds marched
in protest on Thursday. On Friday morning, the Z Society - one of the
university's six secret societies - left a letter and flowers for
students at the university's amphitheatre, where students would later
gather.
"We share in our anger and in our concern, but - what's more -
we share in the belief that our community can and must evolve," the letter says.
Over the weekend, the Phi Kappa Psi house was vandalised,
with windows broken and "UVa Center for Rape Studies" and "Suspend Us"
written on the building's wall.
An anonymous letter
from individuals claiming responsibility for the attack said the
incidents will escalate until the university takes more decisive action -
including mandatory expulsion for students found guilty of sexual
assault and Eramo's resignation.
Rod Dreher
The American Conservative
"Rape is not a political issue
to be negotiated and discussed with an eye towards gradual improvement,"
they write. "It is a criminal act of violence that cannot be
tolerated."
Rolling Stone published a follow-up article
on Friday containing excerpts from reader letters to the magazine,
including many women who agreed with the assessment that the school
fosters a "culture of sexual assault, along with a disdain for those who
attempt to report it".
The articles - and the ensuing controversy - has led many to
once again question the way US universities deal with sexual assault,
and the role the Greek system of fraternities and sororities play on
campus and college culture in general.
"The Rolling Stone story reveals a campus culture in which
fraternity houses are widely known as places where girls, especially
freshman girls (who are too young to get into bars) are invited inside,
gotten drunk, and bedded," writes Rod Dreher for the American Conservative.
He compares the university's reaction to that of the Catholic
Church after allegations of sexual molestation by priests first began
to surface.
"The deeper you read into the story, the more clear it is
that the University of Virginia's administration has been absolutely and
disgustingly derelict for decades, protecting the reputation of the
institution at all costs," he writes.
He concludes that he would never want his children, male or female, from getting involved in the Greek system:
"I do not want my kids, as college students, to be subject to
rape, to participate in rape, or to be in a position in which they are
pressured to prove their loyalty to their fraternity, their friends, and
their university by staying silent about rape."
The university isn't the only one at blame, write the editors of the Roanoke, Virginia, News Leader.
"The seven fraternity brothers who allegedly perpetrated the
2012 rape were almost certainly raised in educated families of economic
means," they write. "Their sense of entitlement was likely high. Did any
parent or teacher ever spell out to them the immorality and
unacceptability of rape?"
The editors of the Roanoke, Virginia, Times call for Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe to order a state police investigation, rather than relying on a local investigation.
"Cynics could just say the local police have an interest in
preserving the reputation of the city's biggest economic driver," they
write. "But people would be more inclined to believe state police. Err
on the side of trust."
Ms Sullivan's initial reaction to the Rolling Stone article
was not nearly strong enough, write the editors of the Charlottesville,
VA, Daily Progress.
"For 48 hours, when the community first needed heartfelt reassurance from the university, that engagement was lacking," they write. "In fact, the word that comes to mind throughout this nightmare is 'disconnect.'"
Virginia student Dani Bernstein, writing in the university's
student newspaper, says that while Erdely's article exposes the school's
deference to fraternities, it paints all Virginia students too broadly.
"We cannot deny there is some pervasive culture here that
allows abuses to occur," she writes. "But we have undeniably excellent
student groups aimed at addressing this very issue."
The University of Virginia, founded by President Thomas
Jefferson, is often called a "public Ivy" - one of the most prestigious
schools in the nation, with a tuition price that's considered a bargain
compared to similarly respected private institutions.
Now, however, Virginia's reputation - always on the minds of
the college's administrators, according to Rolling Stone's report - may
be permanently stained.
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