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Pro Due Process Does Not Equate to Pro Rape [Darleen Click]

The Left’s wholly-owned subsidiary, “Feminism”, has been at the forefront of a scorched-earth campaign against any dissent from Female Supremacy. From exploiting very young girls to forcing colleges into Kafkaesque policies on handling sexual assault accusations, Feminists will stoop to any level. Ask George Will.

Fortunately, some people are not intimated by Vagina Warrior lynch mobs.

Ask litigator Andrew Miltenberg how he decides whether or not to take on the idiosyncratic clients that fall outside his bread-and-butter business litigation practice, and he’ll give you a couple of answers. First, he’ll point you toward Pastor Martin Niemoller’s famous condemnation of German intellectuals for failing to speak out against Nazism when they still had a chance. (“First they came for the Socialists, and I did not speak out—because I was not a Socialist …”)

Second, he’ll reference his own stature—at just 5-foot-6, he’s always been one of the shorter guys in the room. The two come together neatly in what might be termed a personal-political symbiosis. “From an early age,” he says, “I decided that I was going to stand up and be counted, and that I was going to look out for the little guy.” […]

Mr. Miltenberg insists his decision to sue a number of universities on behalf of male students who have been suspended or expelled following sexual assault accusations is not inconsistent with any of the above. He’s already filed four lawsuits—against Vassar College, Columbia University, University of Massachusetts Amherst and Drew University—will file several more before month’s end, and is consulting on 20 or so appeals at the college disciplinary level. In each, he is suing the schools for violations of the Title IX gender-parity law of 1972, contractual claims, unfair trade practices, as well as a number of tort claims. […]

The man is not pro-rape, for God’s sake. What does bother him is the way that many schools have handled the complaints.

Every single one of the men he’s representing, Mr. Miltenberg argues, has suffered egregious due process violations in closed-door college hearings. (He also believes that his clients are innocent of the charges against them.) And that is how he has found himself in the decidedly impolitic position of not only defending those accused of rape, but also suing on their behalf.

Impolitic, perhaps, but he’s also in good company. Twenty-eight current and retired Harvard Law School professors recently sent a letter to the university asking it to abandon its new sexual misconduct policy, arguing, as Mr. Miltenberg has more generally, that the new rules violate the due process rights of the accused. “This is an issue of political correctness run amok,” Alan Dershowitz, an emeritus professor, told a Boston Globe reporter. […]

“Yes, they’re male students,” [Kimberly Lau, a 33-year-old associate at Nesenoff & Miltenberg] says. “But they’re also victims of a system they trusted, paid money to, thought would give them an education and help them on their way to establishing themselves in a career. That’s exactly what I did. And to see their futures being obliterated by a mix of false statements in the first instance but ultimately by the colleges themselves administering kangaroo courts … that’s highly offensive to me.” (In the Vassar case, the school refused to consider as exculpatory evidence Facebook messages from Mr. Yu’s accuser saying she’d “had a wonderful time” the night of the encounter.)

Back to George Will for a moment. The claim against him that has Social Justice Warriors, Vagina Brigade, demanding his ouster from any speaking engagement, was his pointing out that “when they [colleges & universities] make victimhood a coveted status that confers privileges, victims proliferate.”*

Yet here is a perfect example of this occurring.

In mid-September, for example, Mr. Miltenberg got a call from the father of a Division I wrestler in Tennessee who’d been accused of sexual assault. After a four-month investigation, the man’s son was found not guilty by college investigators. And then 24 hours later, the hearing officer had a change of heart. “Here’s how that probably played out,” says Mr. Miltenberg. “Someone got the hearing officer on the phone and asked them, ‘Are you out of your fucking mind? We’re not going to be the school that lets this kid stay on campus. Get him out of here for a year and when it quiets down, bring him back. We don’t need 100 women walking around here with mattresses.’ ”

He’s referring, of course, to Emma Sulkowicz, the Columbia University student who has become the face of what New York calls “the revolution against campus sexual assault.” She’s done so by protesting the “not responsible” verdict Columbia rendered against Jean-Paul Nungesser, the man she accused of raping her, by carrying a mattress with her everywhere. She has referred to the protest as performance art, and is receiving class credit for doing so.

Mr. Miltenberg, who is consulting for Mr. Nungesser, has choice words regarding Ms. Sulkowicz’s performance, and they’re not the kind that are going to win him any friends: “While drawing attention to the important issue of campus rape, she’s clearly enjoying the celebrity she’s created through the perverse spectacle of carrying her mattress around campus. But the attendant media frenzy has seemingly legitimized an event, which, after an investigation and hearing, the University determined did not occur—and which the NYPD has thus far declined to pursue.

“What has clearly been lost in all of this,” Mr. Milternberg continued, “is that she has achieved this celebrity status through a systematic campaign of publicly defaming and destroying the life of a young man. It’s absolutely mind-boggling to me that Columbia has sanctioned her conduct by giving her course credits, all after finding that the young man was not guilty.”

8 Replies to “Pro Due Process Does Not Equate to Pro Rape [Darleen Click]”

  1. Ernst Schreiber says:

    I say we all move out to Pablo’s new place in Montana and set up either an autonomous collective or an anarcho-syndicalist commune.

  2. Angel says:

    “Leftism is a mental disorder” used to be a joke.

  3. sdferr says:

    Surely Juanita Broaddrick has become the sainted patroness for these leftist fembots, right, and along with that, her accused attacker their mortal enemy?

    Sure, right.

  4. Pablo says:

    Anarchy will be fine, as long as I’m in charge.

  5. Neo says:

    In the matter of the “inconvenient innocence” …

  6. Ernst Schreiber says:

    As an anarcho-syndicalist commune, we’ll take it in turns to be a sort of executive officer for the week,but all the decisions of that officer have to be ratified at a special bi-weekly meeting by a simple majority in the case of purely internal affairs, but by a two thirds majority in the case of external ones.

  7. Mrs. B. and I will gladly move out to Montana, but only if we can live in Havre – where my parents lived after WWII for a few years.

    We Exist Only To Serve No One – Or Pablo!

  8. angstlee says:

    Mike Adams has a column out today about this very subject which is pretty good.

Comments are closed.