Although the measure went through several iterations, including being attached to a wholly unrelated bill, Senate Bill 71, so it could be brought up again after the Senate Judiciary Committee voted to table the measure for the year, all versions contained three primary components:
- First, colleges and universities would be required to tell law enforcement about any report of campus sexual assault, or other felony, whether or not the survivor consented to that
- Second, campus officials would be barred from or at least limited in conducting internal investigations
- Third, accused students would be required to be provided with “due process” protections, something already required at state institutions by the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, that were undefined
“Survivors overwhelmingly tell us that, if they knew their school had to forward their sexual assault reports to the police, they would tell no one at all,” said eleven local, state, and national advocacy organizations in a joint letter sent to the Senate Judiciary Committee. “By discouraging survivors from telling anyone, the bill would result in fewer opportunities for administrators to hold wrongdoers accountable and remove those who pose a continuing threat to the campus community.”
They requested three things to pass this year:
- First, that there be no mandatory reporting
- Second, that campus officials continue to be allowed to conduct independent investigations, something required under federal Title IX requirements
- Third, that any procedural safeguards afforded to the accused, such as an opportunity to appeal, also be afforded to the accuser. Not once was there any request to deny accused students due process.
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