u.s. marshalls make an arrest in villanova garage

Boom there it is! It came out on Patch and I just found the alert from Villanova (screenshot above.)

Back story: Radnor PD had posted of law enforcement activity on Ithan Avenue and people were wondering….

Here is verbiage of alert:

Current Alert

Overview of August 27 Incident: Earlier today, U.S. Marshals arrested an unaffiliated individual in the I-1 parking garage on Ithan Avenue. The person, a suspect in an off-campus incident in New Jersey, was taken into custody by federal agents without incident. Law enforcement has since left the scene, and an all-clear was issued. There is no threat to the Villanova University community. This matter is unrelated to last week’s incidents on campus.

Aug 27, 2025 at 1:44 ALL CLEAR: I1 Garage Open. Police have left the area.

Aug 27, 2025 at 1:34 p.m. Police are still on scene. Continue to avoid area. No threat to campus safety. This is unrelated to last week’s incidents

Aug 27, 2025 at 1:30 p.m. Unaffiliated person – suspect in off-campus incident in New Jersey, taken into custody safely at I-1 Garage by federal agents.

Aug 27, 2025 at 1:18 p.m. Police activity in I-1 garage Ithan Ave 1st level. NO IMMEDIATE THREAT.

https://patch.com/pennsylvania/radnor/no-threat-public-despite-police-presence-villanova-auhtorities

Book ’em Danno. However, it does not say it has to do with the swatting incident, but one can hope….

And alas, it was not related. It was a murder suspect from New Jersey.

https://nbcphiladelphia.app.link/TWZsw4xrbWb

active shooter at villanova university on move in day.

Now they’re saying it’s a hoax? If so, whoever perpetrated it should go to jail.

This is crazy. It’s move-in day at Villanova University. I don’t know but I would be hard-pressed not to pack up my freshman and take them back home. People are saying oh they’re shocked that someone got on campus.

For real?

You can get on campus easily enough, especially on move-in day maybe not with a car but all you have to do is walk on campus. It’s not a gated community.

Of course you see the unfortunate tweet as my friend said from Villanova about where are people living this year.

All I can say is, I hope everything ends OK and the students are safe. Who would think that you would find that at Villanova University in the heart of the Main Line ?

The media is saying, there are no reported victims at this time, and that came from Radnor police.

How long before this crap stops? 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-15022917/Villanova-university-philadelphia-pennsylvania-shooter-campus.html

habemus papam

Habemus Papam. He is an American, was an Augustinian and a graduate of Villanova University. Leo XIV.

I honestly never thought in my lifetime that you would have a Pope from the United States.

He’s 69 years old and actually the sister of someone I know was in his class at Villanova.

I am not a big fan of members of the Augustinian order, but I liked what he had to say when he appeared after he was elected Pope by the Cardinals in conclave.

https://www.vaticannews.va/en/pope/news/2025-05/cardinal-elected-pope-papal-name.html

Born in Chicago, Illinois, United States, Prevost now Leo XIV dedicated his early clerical career to the Order of Saint Augustine. The media has reported that he was the least American of the American Cardinals. It has also been reported that he was a long shot.

https://www.cnn.com/2025/05/08/world/pope-leo-xiv-robert-prevost-wwk-intl-latam

The new Pope has a missionary focus, which I like, and I think is needed in this time.

Gifted New York Times Article

I hope Pope Leo XIV continues a lot of what Pope Francis did.

I also heard an interesting fact the other day that 82% of American Catholics do not go to church. I hope he also as Pope continues to clean up the American Church. And among other things, I hope he gets someone to put the anxious former head of the church in Philadelphia Archbishop Charles Chaput out to pasture for good.

His one brother John was interviewed by ABC News. He seems amiable but unsure as what to say exactly but you know what? The lives of everyone in Pope Leo XIV’s family is also going to change. Will that mean they get things like Secret Service keeping an eye on them or do they just live normal lives? We’ve never had an American Pope, so you have to wonder how does becoming Pope affect the families of the Popes? Especially in a modern world.

His other brother Lou, however, is a cat of a different kind. Sadly.

I’m guessing that is why I have already seen some unpleasant memes from the highly politicized about the new Pope which I think is really sad.

This is kind of a historic moment and I hope he’s a good Pope. I don’t think he’s going to make me more of a devout Catholic per se, but as a catholic, I will be paying attention because he’s the first American Pope.

I hope his tenure is safe for him and his family in the US, and I wonder will he come to the US semiquincentennial next year?

And that is my final thought. Next year this country turns 250 and we have an American Pope for the very first time.

god don’t like ugly, villanova.

For years, you hear these stories some of them make the papers and some of them don’t. Sexual assault and rape on Villanova’s campus.

And no, I’m not making it up.

And then there was this other thing that showed up in USA Today in 2022.

USA Today: ‘Gag order’ against assault: Schools bully young accusers into waiving rights, lawyers say.

Title IX is supposed to protect students who allege sexual assault, but some schools are requiring their silence at the outset of internal investigations.

Sara Ganim Special to USA TODAY

June 2, 2022

A student at Villanova University who reported allegations of sexual misconduct was asked to sign a form that prevented her from sharing evidence of the case with almost anyone, even her parents. Violating the terms could have affected the outcome of the school’s investigation into what happened….At York College of Pennsylvania, one student said he was threatened with academic discipline for telling his story on a podcast, violating a nondisclosure agreement that said he couldn’t discuss his allegations, even though he didn’t name the student he accused of rape. 

So this week, the news broke that the guy that videotaped the woman being sexually assaulted most recently at Villanova was still walking for graduation with the rest of his class. It resulted in an uproar as it should have.

If you’ve ever been a victim of any level of sexual assault, one of the things that you face is being re-victimized.

And it’s one of those things where this guy did something really really wrong. He’s not in jail, but it doesn’t mean that his life returns to normal as he finishes college.

NEWS
Villanova Student Demands Man Who Recorded Her Sexual Assault Not Walk at Graduation
The young woman, who was attacked in a dorm room, is graduating the same day as Juan Eguiguren, who recorded the assault on his phone.

by · 4/7/2025, 10:31 a.m.

A Villanova University student who was sexually assaulted in a Villanova dorm room in 2022 is demanding that a student who was present for the assault and videotaped the incident not walk at graduation this May, according to the victim’s attorney.

At the beginning of the academic year in 2022, Villanova student Elijah Katzenell sexually assaulted the student in Katzenell’s dorm room. He did so while she appeared to be unconscious. It was the start of the woman’s sophomore year.

Villanova University Sexual Assault Victim Speaks Out For First Time
“Villanova must be held accountable,” she demands. “Not just in this moment, but always.”

by VICTOR FIORILLO· 4/9/2025, 1:03 p.m.

Here is a link to where to find Victor Fiorello’s articles:

https://www.phillymag.com/tag/villanova/

Today someone made a comment on my blog‘s Facebook page. And it just sort of made me stop not because I think they’re a bad person but because I think they don’t get it. This is what they said:

Villanova is a Catholic university , you would think the standards would be higher

Why would anyone think they had higher standards because they’re Catholic? I’m Catholic and I don’t think that matters a hill of beans to a lot of these schools even if they are Catholic.

I feel is the Catholic Church continually covers things up. Look at all the coverups of sexual abuse on the part of priests. Why do we think this is any different at Villanova? The university is run by Augustinians and they’re like money focused aren’t they?

Now the super Catholics are getting on my case, about my opinion on Villanova and sexual assaults. All of those people need to revisit the Clery Act and how that came to be.

Time to revisit the Clery Act Villanova University

https://www.clerycenter.org/the-clery-act

And I have never thought Villanova does enough. And I have all sorts of questions.

This stuff with Villanova University is everything and part of the problem is this is not the first time young women have been assaulted on this campus over the years is it? Things the media needs to look at include:

✅How is Villanova recording and reporting these incidents?

✅Are victims encouraged to go to the hospital and get rape kits after a sexual assault or just to go to the health center?

✅The health center should be a reporter of crimes like this to law enforcement not merely campus security, but are they?

Even their own student body is concerned. 

https://www.threads.net/@phillymag/post/DIJjT3nxsJs?xmt=AQGzrneH0AFkWIBgMQm3Rkm0r0JaAQbDSzwxYWk-34CcSA

It’s time for Villanova to really step up. I was speaking with a friend yesterday, whose daughter had been interested in the university and my friend and her husband have decided they don’t want her even looking at the school. and I know a lot of people are talking about this.

I’m sure Villanova alumni are circling the wagons because they have very dedicated alumni. And that’s great, but this is where the alumni need to stand up. And if they have to, they need to put their money where their mouth is and get Villanova to really change their ways.

I realize there’s only so much that a school can control, but they need to do better here. Students need to feel safe on campus, and God forbid something happens. They need to feel safe, reporting it.

I honestly have to say to any student out there that if something happens, you hit 911 you don’t just call Villanova security. You get real police on campus to help you.

And so we’re clear, Villanova did not tell Juan Eguiguren he wasn’t walking, Juan Eguiguren decided on his own. That means Villanova did nothing. That means Villanova‘s in the less than zero category when it comes to sexual assault of students and the aftermath.

Apparently, Villanova students are protesting the university and their behavior here this coming Saturday, which is also accepted students day. That’s a big message for the university. I’m waiting for the school to try to do something to bully the students into not protesting.

Villanova wants to tell students what it takes to be a good Catholic, I think they need to start by leading by example don’t you?

Have a good evening everyone and here are some other assorted links to follow.

https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/judge-ruled-villanova-rape-case-has-enough-evidence-to-go-to-a-higher-court/4029139/

https://www.espn.com/college-football/news/story?id=2950225

https://abcnews.go.com/TheLaw/story?id=3416536&page=1

https://www.inquirer.com/news/pennsylvania/villanova-university-sexual-assault-lawsuit-alcohol-20240829.html

https://www.phillymag.com/news/2025/04/09/villanova-protest-juan-eguiguren-sexual/

https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/villanova-student-uber-driver-rape-mirvan-dinler-court-appearance/4029190/

https://6abc.com/villanova-university-sexual-assault-sex-crimes-on-campus/10388104/

https://issuu.com/thevillanovan/docs/the_villanovan___volume_112__issue_6_-wednesday_

https://nbcphiladelphia.app.link/nNtVhDu6qSb

big trouble at nova: philadelphia magazine breaks HUGE story.

Explosive Sexual Assault Lawsuit Hits Villanova University

The lawsuit has been filed over a dorm room incident on the first day of classes in 2022.

By Victor Fiorillo· 8/29/2024, 7:15 a.m.

And Bryn Mawr Courts. OK they call it College Hall or the Courts or whatever now but it is STILL the same old animal house apartment building owned by Marks and Company forever. It is the corner of Montgomery Avenue and Morris Avenue in Bryn Mawr next to Shipley.

The Philadelphia Inquirer also has an article, but Philadelphia Magazine scooped all this morning.

So it’s the university, Marks & Co, and 3 defendants on the Philadelphia filed suit. As per PACER and Pacer Monitor.

Lead DefendantVILLANOVA UNIVERSITY800 Lancaster Avenue
Villanova, PA 19085
Represented ByJAMES A. KELLER
Saul Ewing Arnstein & Lehr LLP
contact info
Nominal Defendant College Hall Associates, L.P., d/b/a College Hall Apartments, a/k/a “The Courts”101 Mill Creek Road
Ardmore, PA 19003
Nominal DefendantCollege Hall G.P., d/b/a College Hall Apartments, a/k/a “The Courts”101 Mill Creek Road
Ardmore, PA 19003
Nominal Defendant Juan Eguiguren
800 Lancaster Avenue
Villnova, PA 19085
Nominal DefendantElijah Jospeh Katzenell12606 Granite Rock Road
Clarksburg, MD 20871
Nominal DefendantMarks & Company USA, Inc. d/b/a Marks & Company101 Mill Creek Road
Ardmore, PA 19003
Nominal DefendantAndrew Polun6 Timberpark Court
Luther-Timonium, MD 21093
PlaintiffLT. JUDGE C.A.230 S. Broad Street Suite 900
Philadelphia, PA 19102

So it seems like only one of the students is still in the Philadelphia area at Villanova? These guys? This is a life tank and why is Villanova not doing more to protect female students? Maybe this is why Villanova needs a better handle on off campus student housing? How many years and how many stories? And always these apartments a problem…see this from Villanovan:

Community Tightens Around the Future of College Hall

Arden West, Co-Editor-in-Chief February 21, 2024

Ok BOLLOCKS. If Villanova supervised off campus students ANYWHERE would there have been all the issues last weekend involving keeping Tredyffrin, Upper Merion, and Radnor police busy? And devil’s advocate time: how can Villanova supervise all of the off campus kids anyway? It’s a big school and is there even an off campus directory yet? Other schools treat off campus a little differently and some schools need students to produce where they are living off campus if they want their class schedules etc, right?

That school has a reputation of misplaced sense of entitlement from a lot of the off campus students even if all the kids aren’t like that, and legit they all aren’t. But you never hear about THOSE kids, only the problems…

And it’s NOT like sexual assaults at Villanova haven’t been reported before.

And I can’t say Villanova or some at Villanova aren’t trying to make a difference. See:

https://www.facebook.com/ItsOnUsNova

But right now it’s back to school with an explosive case of sexual assault. Maybe Marks & Company should just redo the old Bryn Mawr Courts to regular apartments. It’s a really cool old pre-war building.

Here is the Inquirer article:

A woman has sued Villanova University saying she was raped while a student in 2022 because of the school’s negligence in addressing underaged drinking and sexual abuse

The alleged assault took place on the first week of the 2022-23 school year following a party known as Sylly Night. by Abraham Gutman Published Aug. 29, 2024, 5:53 p.m. ET

Yeah and about Katzenell? He seems like to like his social media so I am surprised they can’t track him down?

Yes Villanova of course is aware. So is Lower Merion Township for that matter when it comes to off campus student housing like the old Bryn Mawr Courts.

back to school (off campus) and party houses everywhere it seems?

It’s back to school with off campus student party houses…still Villanova for the most part and still in Mount Pleasant in Tredyffrin and surrounding area. Tredyffrin, Radnor, and Upper Merion all involved last night….

The scanners tell snippets of the tale and last night and again it was Tredyffrin PD, Upper Merion PD, and Radnor PD.

Upper Gulph Road, Old Eagle School Road, near Woodland School, West Valley Road, Mount Pleasant, Upper Gulph and Arden Roads and tell me again are these new dorm locations or just Villanova University off campus student animal house rentals?

So will these municipalities pretend that there is no problem, especially Tredyffrin?

Only time will tell.

Residents are fed up already and it is not even Labor Day.

It’s always the same old story. People understand that college kids want to have fun, except the college kids that rent these off-campus student rentals, seem to have a distinct lack of respect for the surrounding area. And it’s kind of sad because it would take so little effort for them to get along with their neighbors and just be a temporary part of the community that gets along with their neighbors, instead of causing problems. And Villanova needs to be more on top of this as well.

However, it’s not just the kids and the school which need to be held accountable. You must include the rental slumlords, who own and are renting these houses who also need to be held accountable by these municipalities. I am always amazed how all these houses pass rental inspections aren’t you?

All threats on this topic are reported to police and Villanova’s own security department. Just like last year.

heightened awareness

DSC_0182

This post has nothing to do with Chester County, per se.  It is just one of those things that makes me think. It made me think of a girl who once lived in Bryn Mawr. A girl who was raped and murdered in her dorm room at prestigious Lehigh University in 1986.  Jeanne Clery.

At the time, it shocked everyone who heard about this even if you had never met the girl. She was the same age give or take a year as my own sister who attended another not so far away prestigious Pennsylvania college. This girl was also but a few years younger than I was and was from the same area I grew up in: the Main Line. You just don’t think about nice Main Line girls from Main Line prep schools going away to college and getting raped and murdered do you? Especially at schools like Lehigh, right?

The story of Jeanne Clery galvanized the greater Philadelphia area and the country.  Eventually, on July 22, 1988, the murderer of Jeanne Clery was sentenced to death after being convicted of her murder.

In the years which have followed, Jeanne Clery’s parents Howard and Constance Clery have devoted their lives to campus safety. As People Magazine wrote at the time:

During the trial, he and his wife learned about the lapses in security at Lehigh, and shortly after the verdict was announced, they filed a $25 million suit against the college for negligence. It was to be the first round in a campaign that would touch state legislatures, colleges and concerned parents across the country. The Clerys had lost a daughter, but the loss ignited a cause.

The suit was settled out of court (the family is prohibited from disclosing the amount), but the Clerys were not ready to close the book. They used the cash, as well as their own money, to launch Security on Campus, Inc., a nonprofit clearing house for information and advice. They began lobbying state lawmakers for statutes requiring colleges to publicize their crime statistics—not a detail generally found in cheery recruitment brochures—and in May 1988, Pennsylvania Gov. Robert Casey signed the first such bill mandating that all state colleges and universities publish three-year campus-crime reports. In addition, schools are required to have clear policies regarding alcohol and drug consumption on campus. Three more states have followed Pennsylvania’s lead, 21 others have statutes in the works, and the Clerys have already begun campaigning for a federal bill as well.

It is because of the perseverance of the Clery family that the Jeanne Clery Act came to be. As per The Clery Center for Security on Campus: 

The Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act (20 USC § 1092(f)) is the landmark federal law, originally known as the Campus Security Act, that requires colleges and universities across the United States to disclose information about crime on and around their campuses. The law is tied to an institution’s participation in federal student financial aid programs and it applies to most institutions of higher education both public and private. The Act is enforced by the United States Department of Education.

The law was amended in 1992 to add a requirement that schools afford the victims of campus sexual assault certain basic rights, and was amended again in 1998 to expand the reporting requirements. The 1998 amendments also formally named the law in memory of Jeanne Clery. Subsequent amendments in 2000 and 2008 added provisions dealing with registered sex offender notification and campus emergency response. The 2008 amendments also added a provision to protect crime victims, “whistleblowers”, and others from retaliation.

What made me think of Jeanne Clery and all her family has accomplished after all of these years? Two disturbing stories of sexual assault on college campuses.  One from May 2014 in Philadelphia Magazine about Swarthmore College and a recent front page story in The New York Times on Hobart and William Smith Colleges.

Excerpts:

Rape Happens Here PHILADELPHIA MAGAZINE

For 150 years, leafy, progressive Swarthmore College tried to resolve student conflicts in the best Quaker tradition — peacefully and constructively. Then came 91 complaints of sexual misconduct. In a single year.

BY SIMON VAN ZUYLEN-WOOD | APRIL 24, 2014

In the early 1980s, staff members in one of Swarthmore’s libraries began hanging reams of white computer paper in the bathroom stalls, which students would use to gossip about cute boys or gripe about homework. A few years ago, pieces of white paper of a different sort began appearing in campus bathrooms. They’re printed up by the administration and emblazoned with the words SEXUAL ASSAULT RESOURCES…

….ON APRIL 25, 2013, Swarthmore sophomores Hope Brinn and Mia Ferguson stood on Independence Mall in Philadelphia and told assembled media that the college had badly mishandled claims of sexual assault; in response, they were bringing a Title IX complaint to the federal government. This was just days after the duo filed a separate Clery Act complaint alleging that Swarthmore had systematically underreported such incidents. The complaints were part of a larger strategy — they later met with high-profile attorney Gloria Allred — in which Brinn, Ferguson and a couple dozen co-complainants aimed to use their personal stories to shame and ultimately reform their college.

Ferguson, from Brookline, Massachusetts, wrote an op-ed, “Raped and Betrayed,” for a student newspaper. Brinn, from Wilmington, Delaware, stood before the school’s board and told how she was sexually assaulted, stalked, and then met with “grave indifference” by the administration. ….

(in both publications, these are HUGE articles, click on the hyperlinks above each excerpt to read then in their entirety.)

The New York Times:

Reporting Rape, and Wishing She Hadn’t
How One College Handled a Sexual Assault Complaint
By WALT BOGDANICHJULY 12, 2014

GENEVA, N.Y. — She was 18 years old, a freshman, and had been on campus for just two weeks when one Saturday night last September her friends grew worried because she had been drinking and suddenly disappeared.

Around midnight, the missing girl texted a friend, saying she was frightened by a student she had met that evening. “Idk what to do,” she wrote. “I’m scared.” When she did not answer a call, the friend began searching for her.

In the early-morning hours on the campus of Hobart and William Smith Colleges in central New York, the friend said, he found her — bent over a pool table as a football player appeared to be sexually assaulting her from behind in a darkened dance hall with six or seven people watching and laughing. Some had their cellphones out, apparently taking pictures, he said.

For women to report sexual assault at any age is traumatizing.  Read articles about the topic and you learn the common denominator: victims are often victimized again through any judicial process. But what we are talking about here is on college and university campuses. Which in my mind is always geared first to protect the school and administration.

So as far as we have come in this country with things like the Clery Act and heightened awareness on the topic, it seems like many colleges and universities are still treating issues like this poorly if not sweeping them under the carpet? Remember the 2007 front page stories of the Villanova football players accused of raping a girl in her dorm room? Remember but a few days later the victim halted the rape case?

The Philadelphia Inquirer at the time reported on it and said in a July 27, 2007 article: 

A Villanova University student who told the school that she had been raped by three incoming freshman football players, who have since been kicked out of school, does not want to press charges, Radnor police said yesterday…..Villanova’s department of public safety does not have arrest powers, he said. Radnor police are working with the District Attorney’s Office to clarify Villanova’s obligation to report allegations of serious crimes, he said….Villanova’s handling of the matter “seems pretty speedy,” she said.

The Swarthmore College article by Philadelphia Magazine and the New York Times article on Hobart William Smith has ignited this topic once again.

In 1986 I was much younger and what happened to Jeanne Clery was seen from the scary perspective of that girl was my sister’s age and only a few years younger than me.  The recent Philadelphia Magazine article and New York Times article hits me as an adult who not only had friends that attended both of those schools but have friends who have kids of their own or nieces and nephews and even grand children at these schools today.

The Hobart and William Smith article in the New York Times was very hard for me to read. I remember going there back in the day to visit friends from high school and I remember how much my friends loved the school.  I remember how terrific I thought the school was and how pretty the campus was.  And now, decades later, these same friends, male and female are horrified by the New York Times article.

So is this a case of everything that is old is new again? Even as far as we have come with raising awareness on college campuses and laws on the books about how and what campuses must report and so on, are we still dealing in the murky waters of reality versus the veritable machines that are colleges and universities?  After all, negative little things like crime can really hurt the old ratings, rankings, grants, and donations right?

But as a newish parent person  now I have to ask, would you rather deal with a school that tells the truth and acknowledges issues or covers it up and makes everything seem all ivy walled and bucolic with Skip and Sissy walking down a brick lined path to class holding hands?

As someone who was a young adult when Jeanne Clery was murdered I think I would rather have the truth, please.  After all, for what parents fork over in tuition, don’t they deserve the truth? And our kids, don’t they deserve the truth and don’t you want them to feel and be safe, especially if they have to report something heinous like an assault?

Anyway, this made me think about this topic again, and I guess I just don’t get these schools.  I get they want to protect their hallowed halls but the truth shall set them free, right? It makes me wonder how honest schools around this country are with their Clery Act reporting.

Also worth reading? A great piece on the topic in Slate.

Excerpt:

Slate: New York Times Reports Another Campus Sexual Assault Horror Story. Now We Need the Data.
By Emily Bazelon

Can universities handle their role as independent investigators and adjudicators of sexual assault? You may conclude that the answer is no after you read Walt Bogdanich’s big story in the New York Times about the aftermath of an alleged assault at Hobart and William Smith Colleges in New York. It’s called “Reporting Rape, and Wishing She Hadn’t” because from the point of view of Anna, the student who says she was victimized, her school did almost everything wrong….What a disappointing, dismaying mess. And yet, I’m not ready to give up on the whole university adjudication system. People ask me all the time why universities have any responsibility for dealing with rape accusations in the first place. These are serious allegations. Shouldn’t they be in the hands of police, prosecutors, and judges? The answer is that there are supposed to be two parallel tracks. It’s not either/or. In passing and enforcing Title IX, the federal law that’s a shield against sex discrimination in an educational setting, Congress gave schools an independent obligation to investigate allegations of sexual assault and harassment. That doesn’t mean that there shouldn’t also be a police investigation.

Then of course there is the rather predictable I-really-didn’t- beat-my-spouse response in the New York Times from Hobart and William Smith’s Chairwoman of the Board of Trustees:

Re “Reporting Rape, and Wishing She Hadn’t” (front page, July 13):

The Hobart and William Smith Colleges community is heartbroken by our student’s experience, and we deeply regret the pain she has suffered. Her experience does not reflect the environment, values and traditions we have built and maintained for nearly two centuries at Hobart and William Smith. As an alumna, a proud mother of a daughter who graduated from HWS, and chairwoman of the board of trustees, I write with a heavy heart.

Like all colleges and universities, HWS is challenged to ensure that we are meeting the demands of a shifting legal landscape — especially in the area of sexual assault — as we also work to meet the needs of students while fostering a safer and more collegial learning environment.

We welcome the conversation about whether higher education should even have a role in adjudicating cases like this one. However, until federal law changes, we are required to carry out internal investigations and adjudicate cases based on the preponderance of evidence standard, as we did in this case.

….MAUREEN COLLINS ZUPAN
Chairwoman, Board of Trustees
Hobart and William Smith Colleges
Geneva, N.Y., July 15, 2014

There are more letters underneath that one, but that was enough to share. I hate to say it but it seems that Maureen Collins Zupan has more empathy for a Somalian refugee that was cleaning her office ladies room in September 2011, than she does for women on the college campus of Hobart and William Smith Colleges?

She wrote about that Somalian woman:

Screen shot 2014-07-16 at 12.54.08 PM (2).png

In all fairness I wouldn’t want to be president of the board of trustees of this school right now for all the tea in China, and perhaps her response was in part crafted by the college’s spin doctors and image consultants?  It’s not as if all she was saying is wrong, to me it was kind of sort of HOW she said it. She calls herself a feminist, mother, daughter, and so on.  I have never met a true feminist yet who would sit still for something like this do you?

Also worth reading? A June 10th essay in The Atlantic.

All She Said Was No
A dangerous misunderstanding of sexual assault
JAMES HAMBLINJUN 10 2014, 1:35 PM

Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist George Will wrote in The Washington Post on Sunday that being sexually assaulted has become “a coveted status that confers privileges” such that “victims proliferate.” His remarks hit at the core of the misunderstanding and denial that condone sexual assault in its most common form:

Consider the supposed campus epidemic of rape, a.k.a. “sexual assault.” Herewith, a Philadelphia magazine report about Swarthmore College, where in 2013 a student “was in her room with a guy with whom she’d been hooking up for three months”…Six weeks later, the woman reported that she had been raped.Now the Obama administration is riding to the rescue of “sexual assault” victims. It vows to excavate equities from the ambiguities of the hookup culture, this cocktail of hormones, alcohol, and the faux sophistication of today’s prolonged adolescence of especially privileged young adults.

That Swarthmore vignette is sexual assault—not “sexual assault.” Most sexual assault is perpetrated by an acquaintance, not a masked man in the bushes with a knife, and its definition hinges not on physical force but absence of consent. This is a quintessential example of the shape sexual assault takes when it goes unreported and unpunished. Apart from editorial missteps like using skeptical quotes around sexual assault, and accusing an entire generation of faux sophistication while using “herewith” in a thoughtless take on a critical public-health issue, citing the Philadelphia rape story is fraught in that its resonating importance comes in the paragraphs just after Will stops quoting it.

….According to a report today from the U.S. Department of Education, the number of sexual assaults reported on college campuses increased by 50 percent between 2001 and 2011—from 2,200 to 3,300 cases. That’s actually more heartening than disconcerting, in that it’s unlikely that sexual assault increased by that much; rather, more victims are coming forward. They come forward when they don’t feel they’ll be blamed for being raped, dismissed as drunken sluts, and when there are appropriate outlets for reporting and justice. But it’s still underreported and underpunished, thus condoned.

James Hamblin makes a whole lot of sense.  The US Department of Education and US Department of Justice report can be found by clicking on this link here.

We can’t and shouldn’t helicopter parent  and can’t wrap them away from the world in cotton wool, but kids should not only learn quite clearly that no isn’t necessarily a negotiation and should mean NO, but they should be as safe as humanly possibly on college campuses.

Remember Jeanne Clery.

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