Doe v. Loyola
Cases
Loyola University Chicago
Case Overview
Male student athlete John Doe (pseudonym) was expelled from Loyola University of Chicago after being accused of sexual assault by a female student athlete, Jane Doe (also a pseudonym). When John sued Loyola over the circumstances of his expulsion, several alarming facts came to light, including several violations of John鈥檚 due process rights throughout the school鈥檚 investigation, hearing, and appeal. John also found significant evidence that Loyola, and particularly Loyola鈥檚 Deputy Title IX coordinator in charge of his case, were under significant pressure from groups on and off campus to come down hard on male students accused of sexual assault. When viewed together, they are suspicious enough to leave open a genuine factual dispute over whether Loyola was illegally biased in favor of female accusers and against the male accused. But rather than let those disputes be resolved by a jury at trial, the district court ruled in favor of Loyola and ended John鈥檚 case.
Unfortunately, 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 work proves that procedural errors like these are far too common. Lawsuits like John鈥檚 are one of the only ways to hold schools accountable when they trample over the statutory and constitutional rights of students accused of sexual assault. That鈥檚 why FIREfiled an amicus brief on John鈥檚 behalf with the Seventh Circuit, asking the court to let John鈥檚 claims go to trial. Because unless student plaintiffs like John are allowed to actually prove their sex discrimination case to a jury, no college or university will ever be held accountable.