I think there is a misunderstanding of what constitutes due process on and off campus. As some may know, the University itself is not bound by the process afforded to criminal defendants in the criminal system. Thus the University is not obligated to prove JOD's responsibility or Jordy's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. The University is free to dismiss JOD and expell Jordy simply by a preponderance of the evidence.
True, Jordy has not been charged or convicted of rape. If his case makes it to the County Attorney, the State will be obligated to prove his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. On campus, however, Jordy is not afforded the same standards. Sorry, Brandon, but that's just the way it is - on this campus, and many others.
It looks like in this situation the University was in a hurry to prove that it wasn't going to let another Saudi type incident happen again, and in doing so, rushed to convict and expel Jordy based on University proceedings. If those proceedings were faulty, Jordy will have remedies against the University. However, Jordy was unable to convice a federal judge to stop those proceedings, and thus the situation exists as it does now. I'm not saying it's right. I am saying that the University did what it wanted to do and now Jordy is paying the consequences of it.
U of M can't act as its own separate fiefdom apart from the city, county, state, and country. I have been saying that since last fall. This isn't the first time the University has decided it wanted to implement its own rule of law, but now that it affects one of our star players, we finally notice it. There has to be some major reforms on this campus and better cooperation with law enforcement officials, or else the price to be paid for these missteps will grow greater by the day.