griz4life said:Wouldn't an acquittal after an 11-day trial also affect the preponderance of evidence? I would think the outcome of the trial would actually be evidence for the school to consider, since no school is going to put the time and resources into a conduct hearing that the defense and prosecution invest in a court proceeding.
If you go back and look at the doccuments released by the federal judge, the school's investigation was nowhere near as thorough as the ones presented to the District Court.
Not necessarily, for the same distinction that "some" are making that the jury did not find JJ innocent, they found him "not guilty." In other words, there is not enough evidence to meet the criminal standard, but there could be to meet the civil preponderence standard. This is precisely why OJ Simpson was sued civilly and found liable after he was acquitted criminally. BTW, I do agree with RBuley's logical analysis that non-guilty = innocent based upon the consitutional presumption, but if it helps some to accept the verdict by making the innocent/ not guilty distinction, then that's okay.
I guess where this also raises my eyebrows is that this Title IX edict would only arise in the context of sexual assault- so, we are narrowly identifying a specific crime and applying a lower standard to it in the college arena. Theoretically then, a student accused of murder (that has no Title IX implications) would have the benefit of the higher burden of proof than say a student accused of sexual assault.