Table of Contents
āGuilty Until Proven Innocentā Receives Support at Congressional Sex Assault Hearing

Earlier today, ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½ās Joe Cohn testified before the House Education and Workforce Committeeās Subcommittee on Higher Education and Workforce Training during its hearing on ā.ā During the hearing, Joe elaborated on why the adjudication of sexual assault allegations should not be left solely to educational institutions, which are not properly equipped to perform this function.
Weāll have more in-depth coverage of the hearing on The Torch soon, but one moment in particular stood out as warranting an immediate response. About an hour and 56 minutes into the video below, Representative Jared Polis suggests that the āpreponderance of the evidenceā standardāwhich requires only that fact-finders be 50.01 percent certain in order to find an accused student guiltyāmay be too high of a bar.

Polisā statements and Joeās apt response:
[Polis said] āIt certainly seems reasonable that a school for its own purposes might want to use a preponderance of evidence standard, or even a lower standard. Perhaps a likelihood standardā¦. If I was running a (private college) I might say, well, even if there is only a 20 or 30 percent chance that it happened, I would want to remove this individual.ā
Cohn responded that a burden of proof standard even lower than the preponderance of evidence standard would unquestionably violate studentsā due process rights. The preponderance of evidence standard is itself an abridgment of due process unless it is accompanied by balancing factors such as cross-examination, subpoena power, and competent judges and juries, according to Cohn.
Astonishingly, Polis continued down this line of thought:
[ā]It seems like we ought to provide more of a legal framework, then, that allows a reasonable likelihood standard or a preponderance of evidence standard. If there are 10 people who have been accused, and under a reasonable likelihood standard maybe one or two did it, it seems better to get rid of all 10 people. Weāre not talking about depriving them of life or liberty, weāre talking about them being transferred to another university, for crying out loud.ā
(Emphasis [Soaveās].) That last line drew applause from the crowd.
As Joe pointed out, students expelled for sexual assault find that the ārapistā label follows them for life, hindering their professional careers and other goals. And many lawmakers are pushing for exactly this result, with designed to make obvious to recipients of a studentās transcript when that student has been punished for (or has an unresolved investigation for) sexual assault. Of course, if the student actually committed the crime, this result is appropriate. But to do as Polis suggests and derail a studentās life because of the mere accusation that he or she might have done something wrongāwithout a majority of the evidence pointing to his or her guilt, and even with the vast majority pointing to his or her innocenceāis irretrievably incompatible with basic principles of fairness and justice.
This is especially true because Polis shrugs away not only the idea that findings of guilt should be made with some amount of certainty but also the absolutely critical idea that each case be decided based on the facts surrounding that individual allegation. If āmaybe one or twoā of 10 people committed an assault, he says, all 10 accused students should be expelled. This is differentāand even worseāthan his initial statement that a student should be expelled if some, but not a majority, of the evidence weighs against him.
But ignoring that problem for a second, letās look at the implications of what Polis is saying about those āone or twoā who ādid itā: Those rapists can simply continue their schooling at another institution. Does he have no reservations about the danger this would pose to students at the transferring studentās new institution? How could bouncing attackers from school to school possibly protect the safety of American college students?
As Joe pointed out in his oral testimony, the bottom line is that rape is a crime and should be treated as such. That means providing meaningful due process protections for the accused and serious punishments for those found guilty. Colleges provide neither. Proponents of the status quo are turning a blind eye to its failings for both victims and the accused.
Soave sent Polis some follow-up questions about his remarks; read in full for the answers.
Recent Articles
FIREās award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Maineās censure of lawmaker for post about trans student-athlete is an attack on free speech

Trumpās border czar is wrong about AOC

FIREcalls out 60 Minutes investigation as 'political stunt' in comment to FCC
