Table of Contents
Syracuse punishes student for asking man at party if he鈥檚 a Canadian sex offender
- Freshman found responsible for harming the man鈥檚 鈥渕ental health and safety鈥
- Placed on disciplinary probation and required to attend 鈥淒ecision-Making,鈥 鈥淐onflict Coaching鈥 workshops
- Student: 鈥淚 used my voice to protect myself and others from the possibility of predatory behavior. Now I鈥檓 being punished for it.鈥
- FIRE calls on Syracuse to reverse charges on appeal and reform its policies
Syracuse, N.Y., Jan. 19, 2022 鈥 She鈥檇 heard rumors that the guy at the party had a history of problematic behavior toward women. So Syracuse University freshman Samantha Jones went right up to him and asked: Was he a registered sex offender?
Now, Syracuse is enforcing its ban on causing 鈥渕ental harm鈥 to punish the 18-year-old biology student for her question. It鈥檚 a move that adds to Syracuse鈥檚 troubling history of censorship and raises new questions about the vulnerability of Syracuse students who report or discuss sexual misconduct on campus.
鈥淪yracuse鈥檚 nebulous ban on 鈥榤ental harm鈥 means students don鈥檛 know if they can ask questions or discuss sexual misconduct without getting in trouble,鈥 said FIREProgram Officer Alex Morey. 鈥淎dministrators should take action now to ensure these kinds of vague policies don鈥檛 infringe students鈥 core expressive rights.鈥
In October, having heard rumors of past predatory behavior, Jones approached a fellow student at an off-campus party and asked him if he is a registered sex offender in his native country, Canada.
He reported the incident to campus police, who referred the matter to Syracuse鈥檚 Office of Community Standards. Last month, the University Conduct Board found Jones responsible for violating on 鈥淸c]onduct, whether physical, electronic, oral, written or video, which threatens the mental health, physical health, or safety of anyone.鈥 Jones has since been placed on disciplinary probation and is required to attend 鈥淒ecision-Making鈥 and 鈥淐onflict Coaching鈥 workshops.
鈥淎ccusing someone of something that has no validity, especially being on a sex offender list can harm one鈥檚 mental health and safety,鈥 wrote Syracuse administrator Sheriah Dixon in a December memo detailing Jones鈥 formal punishment. The problem with this assessment? Jones didn鈥檛 accuse the man of anything. The Conduct Board鈥檚 own findings conclude plainly that all Jones did was seek clarification about rumors.
鈥淚 used my voice to protect myself and others from the possibility of predatory behavior. Now I鈥檓 being punished for it,鈥 said Jones, who is appealing the decision. 鈥淭his has scared our community and campus into a state of no longer reporting predators on campus due to a fear that the school will retaliate.鈥
FIRE wrote to Syracuse on Friday, asking the school to reverse its charges against Jones and reminding the institution of its obligations to protect student speech and facilitate sexual abuse reporting. FIREurges Syracuse to clarify to students that asking questions or reporting sexual misconduct on campus doesn鈥檛 constitute 鈥渕ental harm鈥 鈥 and won鈥檛 get them punished.
FIRE warned that this policy would be abused when Syracuse adopted it in 2020. Jones鈥 case shows how easily the 鈥渕ental harm鈥 ban ratchets up the stakes of any run-of-the-mill student disagreement. The looming threat of punishment will cast a chill over campus conversations.
"Syracuse has been a bad actor in the free speech space for years, but this case represents an outrageous new low."
By punishing Jones for discussing sexual misconduct, Syracuse may also be violating its institutional, state, and federal obligations to facilitate sexual abuse reporting on campus. Syracuse students might fear that reporting abuse could trigger 鈥渕ental harm鈥 in their alleged abusers 鈥 leaving sexual misconduct victims vulnerable to discipline under the policy.
鈥淪yracuse has been a bad actor in the free speech space for years, but this case represents an outrageous new low,鈥 said Morey. 鈥淎dministrators should throw Sam鈥檚 case out and immediately review any policies that threaten students鈥 most basic rights. Meanwhile, students, faculty, and alumni should get mad about what is happening at Syracuse.鈥
The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education () is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to defending and sustaining the individual rights of students and faculty members at America鈥檚 colleges and universities. These rights include freedom of speech, freedom of association, due process, legal equality, religious liberty, and sanctity of conscience 鈥 the essential qualities of liberty.
CONTACT:
Katie Kortepeter, Media Relations Associate, 果冻传媒app官方: 215-717-3473; media@thefire.org
Sheriah Dixon, Director of Community Standards, Syracuse University: studentconduct@syr.edu
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