Tag: sororities
Fraternities Lobby Against Campus Rape Investigations

Fraternities Lobby Against Campus Rape Investigations

By David Glovin (Bloomberg News) (TNS)

College fraternities and sororities, concerned that students accused of sexual assault are treated unfairly, are pushing Congress to make it harder for universities to investigate rape allegations.

The groups’ political arm plans to bring scores of students to Capitol Hill on April 29 to lobby for a requirement that the criminal justice system resolve cases before universities look into them or hand down punishments, according to an agenda reviewed by Bloomberg News.

“If people commit criminal acts, they should be prosecuted and they should go to jail,” said Michael Greenberg, leader of 241-chapter Sigma Chi, one of many fraternities participating in the legislative push.

The Fraternity & Sorority Political Action Committee, or “FratPAC,” and two other groups will ask Congress to block colleges from suspending all fraternities on a campus because of a serious incident at a single house. In addition, the Greek representatives want a rule against “any mandate” for chapters to go co-ed.

These Washington efforts come as colleges have shut fraternity chapters or required them to admit women after sex- assault allegations. Activists representing rape victims say that universities don’t take complaints seriously. A new documentary, The Hunting Ground, singles out fraternities for creating an environment that enables assaults.

Yet there’s a growing backlash from critics — including some Harvard and University of Pennsylvania law professors — who say university sexual-assault proceedings are stacked against the accused.

The U.S. Education Department requires colleges to investigate complaints and discipline students found responsible for sexual assault. University disciplinary boards can take action, including suspensions or expulsions, far more quickly than courts and, unlike criminal proceedings, don’t require a finding “beyond a reasonable doubt.” To sanction a student, allegations must be found more likely than not to be true.

“Campus judicial proceedings” should be deferred “until completion of criminal adjudication (investigation and trial),” according to an e-mail sent to students selected to lobby for fraternities.

Joelle Stangler, the University of Minnesota student body president, said the fraternity groups’ efforts are “extremely problematic.”

“Adjudication on campuses is incredibly important for victims and survivors, to make sure they receive some sort of justice,” said Stangler, who has worked with a Minnesota advocacy group for sexual-assault victims.

Ten-year-old FratPAC, which has raised about $2.1 million in donations for congressional candidates, invites students every year to Capitol Hill to lobby for tax breaks for fraternity houses. In 2012, it fought against federal anti-hazing legislation.

Two other groups — the North-American Interfraternity Conference, which represents 74 national fraternities, and the National Panhellenic Conference, which represents 26 sororities — will join FratPAC’s lobbying effort.

Fraternities and sororities are concerned about assailants going unpunished and victims lacking support services, as well as the rights of students facing a disciplinary process “that is not fair and transparent,” said Washington lobbyist Kevin O’Neill, who is FratPAC’s executive director, in a statement on behalf of the fraternity and sorority groups.

“Fraternities and sororities intend to be a leader in offering ideas for how Congress can provide a safe campus for all students,” O’Neill said.

Along with activists, Greek groups will be taking on many college administrators, who say they need campus proceedings to keep potentially dangerous students off their campuses before criminal cases are resolved.

“Imagine a situation where a young women is sexually assaulted, and it has to go through the state judicial process,” saidMark Koepsell, who heads the Association of Fraternity/Sorority Advisors, which represents faculty and administrators. “Meanwhile, the alleged perpetrator is walking around campus.”

The Washington-based Student Affairs Administrators in Higher Education, a trade group, will oppose the Greek group’s agenda.
“The criminal justice system has been a virtual failure in its ability to address sexual assault,” said Kevin Kruger, president of the group. “It’s a really, really, really bad idea.”

Jennifer Waller, executive director of the Association for Student Conduct Administration, which represents the staff of sexual-assault hearings, said the goal of campus proceedings is to weigh whether a student violated university rules, not the law. The accused has a right to present a defense, she said.

Dozens of men have filed lawsuits claiming they have been unfairly treated in campus hearings. Fraternity groups also point to cases of what they call a rush to judgment against Greek houses. University of Virginia suspended activity at all houses after Rolling Stone magazine published a since-discredited article in November claiming fraternity members had gang-raped a student. On Monday, police in Charlottesville, UVA’s home, said they found no evidence supporting the Rolling Stone account and were suspending their investigation.

Beginning April 27 in Washington, the fraternity groups will provide two days of training to the student lobbyists, who will then split into small groups for visits with lawmakers and their aides. Members of congress, including recipients of FratPAC donations, will speak at its April 29 dinner.

In her summary of the Greeks’ positions, Jennifer Kilian, director of member services for the interfraternity conference, said the student lobbyists will also call for more data and education about sexual assault and new prevention programs.

“Students and alumni participating in the Greek Hill visits will be lobbying on the unified position fraternities and sororities have adapted (sic) on Title IX issues,” Kilian said, referring to the federal law that bans discrimination on the basis of gender, inan e-mail to those selected to lobby.

(c) 2015 Bloomberg News, Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Image: from The Hunting Ground via YouTube

University Of Central Florida Puts Places Sorority, Fraternity On Probation

University Of Central Florida Puts Places Sorority, Fraternity On Probation

By Denise-Marie Ordway, Orlando Sentinel

ORLANDO, FL — In the latest incident involving Greek students and alcohol at the University of Central Florida, a fraternity and sorority have been put on probation for a year.

The chapters were disciplined after a fraternity member was charged with sexually assaulting a member of the sorority. But the decision was not connected to the rape case, in which Marlon Austin De La Cruz, 22, of Orlando, was arrested in early April.

Instead, the Delta Zeta sorority and Zeta Beta Tau fraternity were sanctioned earlier this month because the incident involved drinking and other conduct violations, school officials said.

The rape investigation prompted UCF to look into what happened after a social the chapters held together at a downtown Orlando bar in late March.

Earlier, UCF suspended its Chi Omega sorority chapter for alcohol-related misconduct and hazing. Three sorority members were accused of blindfolding two pledges, forcing them to drink an entire bottle of rum and then abandoning them in a campus parking garage to find their way home.

A year ago, UCF lifted a suspension it had placed on many Greek activities during an increase in allegations of hazing and alcohol abuse. At the time, officials said they took such drastic steps to try to change Greek culture.

Four fraternities and sororities have been disciplined for alcohol-related misconduct in the past year, said Chad Binette, a university spokesman. It was not clear whether those included the latest incident.

On March 27, a member of the Delta Zeta sorority said she was sexually assaulted in the back seat of a car on the drive from the bar in downtown Orlando back to UCF. The woman, whose age was not released, told police she was so drunk she could not stop the attack or call out to her boyfriend, who was driving the car.

De La Cruz was suspended from Zeta Beta Tau after the allegation surfaced, said Laurence Bolotin, executive director of the fraternity with headquarters in Indianapolis. Bolotin said De La Cruz had been kicked out of the fraternity by the time the State Attorney’s Office charged him May 13 with sexual battery, a second-degree felony.

Because of student-privacy rules, UCF officials could not say whether they have taken or will take any disciplinary action against De La Cruz.

The university sent letters to the local chapters of Delta Zeta and Zeta Beta Tau on May 27 and May 12, respectively, saying their probations would last through the spring 2015 semester. All events held by either must be alcohol-free.

Binette said neither organization had been disciplined or sanctioned by UCF for any offense within at least the last five years.

Staff writer Tiffany Walden contributed to this report.

Photo: University of Central Florida via Flickr

University Suspends Sorority Amid Hazing Allegation

University Suspends Sorority Amid Hazing Allegation

By Denise-Marie Ordway and Tiffany Walden, Orlando Sentinel

ORLANDO, Florida — The University of Central Florida has suspended its Chi Omega chapter over hazing allegations against three members of the sorority, who are accused of blindfolding two pledges and taking them to woods on campus to drain an entire bottle of rum.

The University of Central Florida police department also is investigating the April 4 incident.

After the two drank the bottle, the pledges were taken to a school parking garage and abandoned, according to a report from UCF. The only injury reported involved a pledge who scraped and bruised her hand and arm after she fell while trying to find her way home.

The boyfriend of one of the women eventually picked them up and dropped them off at an apartment on campus. No names or ages were released.

The university learned about the incident April 10, after it was reported to the sorority’s national headquarters. It comes almost exactly a year after UCF lifted the suspension it placed on many Greek activities amid a spike in allegations of hazing and alcohol abuse.

In February 2013, Florida’s largest public university halted all fraternity and sorority social events and initiations. It also required each group to come up with a new plan for preventing and controlling behavior.

On Wednesday, UCF spokesman Chad Binette said the university goes to great lengths to warn students about alcohol and hazing. Both were the subjects of dozens of presentations and workshops this school year involving fraternities and sororities, he said.

All incoming students are required to participate in AlcoholEdu, an online interactive program that focuses on student drinking and the effects of alcohol, before they can register for classes.

“The start of a new school year always presents an opportunity to look into ways we can enhance those efforts, for fraternity and sorority members and also our entire student body,” Binette said.

The three Chi Omega members involved have resigned from the sorority, said a spokeswoman for the sorority’s national headquarters in Memphis.

UCF sent a letter to the president of the sorority chapter Monday saying the group was being placed on interim suspension, effective immediately.

That means it cannot participate in any fundraisers, socials or service projects. It can only gather for regularly scheduled business meetings approved by the university.

The chapter president could not be reached for comment.

The university is scheduled to meet with a sorority representative April 25 to determine whether the chapter’s suspension should continue. The group is accused of disruptive conduct, hazing and alcohol-related misconduct, including giving alcohol to someone under age 21.

Photo: Schoolfun5 via Flickr