tnt said:
br fan said:
tnt said:
Rule 11 yeah yeah, and the University has no right to respond.......
Just what was the "judges" ruling
I'm real curious as to how you think UM is going to respond. Paoli stated he was not entitled to question the witnesses; do you believe UM is going to say he's lying and that he actually was entitled to question them?
Nope, they will say he wasn't allowed to question the witnesess per the rules of honor court Paoli stated that JJ was not entitled to submit exculpatory evidence (the e-mail); do you believe UM is going to say he was lying and that he actually was entitled to submit that evidence?
Nope they will say per sexual abuse training that prior intent doesn't eliminate the right of the accused to say no and after the fact the accused often question whether or not they could have done something different, perhaps done done something to avoid it etc etc. therefore because they were correct in limiting their investigation and decision on what happened THAT night Paoli stated JJ was denied representation (only JJ could speak, not Paoli); do you believe UM is going to say Paoli was lying and actually he was entitled to speak?
Nope once again the rules of honor court state clearly that the attorney is not allowed to speak The list goes on. As noted above, I'm pretty confident that UM is not going to be contesting the "facts," i.e the process they used. UM will be arguing a legal conclusion, i.e. that JJ had a fair hearing even though he was not entitled to question witnesses, submit exculpatory evidence or be represented by counsel etc. The court has told UM what it thinks of that argument if UM makes it.
The truth is only the begining, Nobody said Paoli lied.
The court may have an opinion, but the only thing that was clear to me, is that a decision would come from a full hearing/trial not a 200 page brief from Paoli (BTW the process has been upheld a number of times most recently last month when an honor court decision was made without even the accused present (they took away his degree awarded 6 years prior)
Before any decision will be made for JJ the honor court system used similarly (including right to counsel and the role counsel plays) all over the United States will be on trial. I would guess it would maybe 10 or 15 years????
I agree that the court did not make a decision and that before it ever does it will permit both sides to make their arguments. This is from UM's current on-line version of the code:
1. The Accused. A student accused of violating the Student Conduct Code has
certain rights:
a. The right to be advised that a complaint is being investigated, and the right
to be advised of the potential charges.
b. The right to review the evidence.
c. The right to decline to make statements.
d. The right to submit a written account relating to the alleged charges.
e. The right to know of the identity of individuals who will be present at an
administrative conference or a Court hearing.
f. The right to have a person of choice, including legal counsel, present
throughout any and all proceedings provided for in this Code.
g. The right to a period of time to prepare for a hearing, and the right to
request a delay of the hearing for exigent circumstances.
h. The right to hear and question witnesses and the accuser.
i. The right to present relevant evidence and witnesses.
j. The right to timely adjudication of charges as provided in this Code.
I'm pretty sure the court read the above before issuing the order, because it commented about the old burden of proof as still being in UM's on-line version. Perhaps the new version of the code has additional substantive changes, but I was unaware that the honor court no longer permits witnesses to be interviewed, or requires JJ to give up his right to remain silent if he desires to defend himself. If that is the case then the honor system throughout the US should be put on trial. But I don't think it does. In reality UM will be on trial for failing to follow its own rules.