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Sex Discrimination Lawsuit Over Alleged Wrongful Title IX Suspension Against UCLA Can Go Forward
“Particularly given the ultimate findings of Roe’s numerous fabrications, Mr. Zeck’s statement plausibly supports an inference that the Regents prejudged Roe’s allegations (and Doe’s defenses thereto) during its investigation on the basis of their respective genders.”
From Doe v. Regents, decided Tuesday by the Ninth Circuit, in an opinion by Judge Consuelo Callahan, joined by Judge Danielle J. Forrest and District Judge and Carol Bagley Amon:
Based on a former student's bare allegations of misconduct, and before beginning a formal Title IX investigation, the University of California, Los Angeles (the "University" or "UCLA") issued an immediate interim suspension of John Doe, a Chinese national graduate student just months away from completing his Ph.D. in chemistry/biochemistry. Over five months later, the University suspended Doe for two years after finding he violated the University's dating violence policy by placing Jane Roe "in fear of bodily injury," just one of the thirteen charges the University brought against him. As a result, Doe lost his housing, his job as a teaching assistant on campus, his ability to complete his Ph.D., and his student visa….
As we clarified in Schwake v. Arizona Board of Regents (9th Cir. 2020), the relevant inquiry on a motion to dismiss a Title IX claim in this context is whether the alleged facts, if true, raise a plausible inference that the university discriminated against the plaintiff on the basis of sex…. Doe's First Amended Complaint ("FAC") meets this standard….
At all relevant times herein, Doe was a Chinese national graduate student at UCLA on a student visa pursuing his Ph.D. in chemistry/biochemistry. He first met then-UCLA student Jane Roe in a chemistry class during the spring quarter of 2014, and the two began dating that summer. Their long-term romantic relationship continued, and the couple became engaged in December 2016. They planned to marry after Doe was scheduled to graduate with his doctorate in June 2017.
However, the relationship ended abruptly in February 2017, after Doe learned that Roe had been unfaithful to him throughout their relationship. On February 12, Doe sought to break off his engagement with Roe and the two met briefly outside Roe's home. The next morning, by text message, the pair agreed to meet on campus after Doe completed teaching his course and after Roe got off work on February 13, to exchange property that each had in their possession. Sometime thereafter, Doe learned that Roe had withdrawn the entire balance of approximately $8,000 from their joint bank account.
At about 9:45 a.m. on February 13, Roe showed up unannounced to Doe's teaching assistant office on campus, before he was scheduled to teach, to confront him. Roe was not an active student enrolled at UCLA at the time. Roe pounded on the door repeatedly, without announcing herself, until Doe answered. Doe, who was meeting with another graduate student at the time, refused to let Roe into his office. Roe demanded that Doe return her Social Security card which she claimed Doe had in his possession. When Doe asked for his engagement ring back, Roe said she had thrown it into the ocean.
Doe explained that he needed to leave to teach his class and asked Roe to wait until he was finished, but Roe refused to let him leave his office. Roe attempted to block Doe's doorway with her arms stretched out and threatened to call the police to have Doe arrested. Eventually, Doe was able to get around Roe to get to his class. Roe followed him and unsuccessfully tried to prevent him from entering his classroom.
While Doe taught his class, Roe called the University police to report that Doe had pushed her in the upper torso area and grabbed her wrist and forearm. Based on this report, University police arrested Doe for misdemeanor domestic battery after he completed teaching his class.
Two months after the incident, on April 13, Roe lodged a Title IX complaint with the University against Doe, alleging thirteen instances of misconduct, some dating back to the Fall of 2014. Although she was no longer a student at UCLA at the time of the February incident (or at the time she filed her Title IX complaint), she represented to the University that she was. UCLA did not verify Roe's status as a student. Roe also reported as part of her Title IX complaint that she had suffered a rib fracture from her encounter with Doe on February 13. The University ultimately found this to be untrue.
On May 10, 2017, the University's Title IX Office and the Office of Student Conduct issued a joint Notice of Charges to Doe, charging him with violations of policies relating to dating violence, conduct that threatens health or safety, stalking, sexual harassment, terrorizing conduct, and sexual assault. Pending resolution of the investigation of these charges, and without a hearing, the Office of the Dean of Students immediately suspended Doe on an interim basis, banned him from UCLA property, and evicted him from student housing. {Doe appealed the interim suspension, and following a special hearing held on May 22, 2017, the University modified the interim suspension to allow Doe to participate in certain activities on campus.}…
On February 13, 2018, Doe filed a petition for writ of mandamus against the Regents in Los Angeles Superior Court, in which he challenged the disciplinary proceedings and decision rendered by the University. On April 3, 2018, Judge Chalfant granted Doe's motion to stay the decision and sanction, finding in relevant part that the evidence did not support the University's findings. Not long thereafter, on May 22, 2018, the Regents filed a Confession of Judgment stating that the Regents believed that Doe's petition should be granted. The court therefore entered judgment in Doe's favor, the Regents' decision and sanction were vacated and set aside, and the matter was remanded for the Regents to reconsider its action.
But this relief came too late, and Doe lost his student visa status.
The court allowed Doe's sex discrimination against UCLA to go forward:
Doe's [Complaint] divides his relevant allegations into three categories: (1) allegations of external pressures, (2) allegations of an internal pattern and practice of bias, and (3) allegations of specific instances of bias in his case. We consider each of these categories of allegations in turn. We conclude that these allegations, when combined, raise a plausible inference of discrimination on the basis of sex sufficient to withstand dismissal at this stage.
In the interests of space, I'll skip items 1 and 2 (though you can read them in the opinion), and focus on item 3:
The above allegations taken together sufficiently allege background indicia of sex discrimination. However, to survive a motion to dismiss, Doe "must combine [those allegations] with facts particular to his case." We hold that Doe has sufficiently done so.
First, the [Complaint] alleges that Jason Zeck, UCLA's Respondent Coordinator, advised Doe in July 2017, during the pending Title IX investigation, that "no female has ever fabricated allegations against an ex-boyfriend in a Title IX setting." The Regents' position that Mr. Zeck's alleged statement cannot possibly be true because Doe was only found responsible for one of the thirteen alleged incidents of misconduct brought against him by Roe is simply untenable. {An alternative explanation might be that, when confronted by a claim that lacked merit, the University rushed to judgment in issuing the two-year interim suspension and then sought out a way to find the accused responsible for something in order to justify its earlier actions.}
Instead, as we must accept this well-pleaded allegation as true, Mr. Zeck's statement suggests that UCLA's Title IX officials held biased assumptions against male respondents during the course of Doe's disciplinary proceeding. Particularly given the ultimate findings of Roe's numerous fabrications, Mr. Zeck's statement plausibly supports an inference that the Regents prejudged Roe's allegations (and Doe's defenses thereto) during its investigation on the basis of their respective genders.
Contrary to the Regents' argument, "statements by 'pertinent university officials,' not just decisionmakers, can support an inference of gender bias." Mr. Zeck's comments are relevant because he served as the "Respondent Coordinator" throughout the Title IX investigation. So while not a decisionmaker, Mr. Zeck was familiar with UCLA's Title IX process and the facts underlying Doe's case. It is therefore reasonable to infer that Mr. Zeck's statement reflects the broader gender assumptions within UCLA's Title IX office during its investigation of Doe.
Second, the [Complaint] alleges that Associate Dean Rush, the ultimate decisionmaker here, advised Doe that if she were in his shoes, she would have invited Roe into her office during the February 2017 incident. Associate Dean Rush's comment suggests that she did not view Roe as an aggressor, and at the very least raises the question of whether, if the gender roles were reversed, Associate Dean Rush would have made the same recommendation to a female approached by her angry, male ex-fiancé when he showed up unannounced to confront her at her place of employment.
The [Complaint] further alleges several additional facts which, if assumed to be true, demonstrate irregularities in Doe's proceedings that, while not dispositive on their own, support an inference of gender bias.
For example, the [Complaint] alleges that the University demonstrated its disparate treatment of Doe as a male during its investigation by failing to investigate his claim that Roe was not a student at the time of the incident and not discrediting Roe when it became apparent that Roe had misrepresented her status as a student and falsely stated that she fractured a rib on February 13. {Roe's status as a non-student at the time of the incident would not preclude the University from proceeding with investigating her complaint under Title IX because her complaint also included allegations of misconduct dating back to 2014, when she was a student at UCLA.} The [Complaint] also alleges other irregularities in the investigation including the fact that Ms. Shakoori made findings of violations of policy not included in the Joint Notice or Amended Joint Notice of Charges.
The [Complaint] enumerates several other allegations of irregular proceedings during the appeal hearing itself, including that (1) the burden was placed on Doe, not the University; (2) Doe was not permitted to speak at the appeal hearing; (3) fact witness testimony supporting Doe's account of the events was discounted, while witness testimony supporting Roe's account was accepted without the need for an independent interview by the appeal panel; (4) Associate Dean Rush evidenced gender bias when she falsely stated that the two-year suspension was required by SVSH Policy for any type of dating violence; and (5) the appeal panel only found that Roe was in fear of "bodily injury," not "serious bodily injury" as required by the policy. Additionally, the [Complaint] referenced the state court's ruling on the motion for stay in the writ proceeding, wherein the court found that the evidence did not support the Regents' findings.
Although the Regents contends that these allegations of procedural irregularities do not suggest that gender was the reason for the supposed errors, this Circuit, as well as the Seventh and Sixth Circuits, have found similar irregularities support an inference of gender bias, particularly when considered in combination with allegations of other specific instances of bias and background indicia of sex discrimination.
The fact that the Regents ultimately found Doe not responsible for twelve of the thirteen allegations made against him does not make the allegations of irregularities in the proceedings any less relevant to our inquiry. Rather, at some point an accumulation of procedural irregularities all disfavoring a male respondent begins to look like a biased proceeding despite the Regents' protests otherwise.
Taken together, Doe's allegations of external pressures and an internal pattern and practice of bias, along with allegations concerning his particular disciplinary case, give rise to a plausible inference that the University discriminated against Doe on the basis of sex. The fact that sex discrimination is "a plausible explanation" for the University's handling of the disciplinary case against Doe is sufficient for his Title IX claim to survive a motion to dismiss. While Doe "may face problems of proof, and the factfinder might not buy the inferences that he's selling," his Title IX claim makes it past the pleading stage.
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In my experience, university disciplinary proceedings rarely have any semblance of common legal practice, such as due process, the right to confront an accuser, etc. This is only in part because most professors (law professors, excluded) have very little sense of the historical context in which these important legal doctrines have formed.
The university's main goal is to get rid of the issue as quietly as possible.
How does a University become Judge, Jury and Prosecutor for a Criminal Case?
Well, say that someone accuses a bank employee of theft. I assume the bank will investigate this, and will decide whether to fire the person -- even if the prosecutor decides not to prosecute it. And I assume we'd say that's fine, because the bank isn't actually throwing anyone in jail (even though it may be very bad for the person's career if the bank does fire him).
Would you agree? If so, why would the analysis be different for universities, students, and sexual assault? (I discuss this in more detail here.)
To be sure, it may well be that the university's procedures should provide various protections for accused students. I just don't think that the "judge, jury, and prosecutor for a criminal case" quite works here.
A big difference is that the bank is presumably sweeping the theft under the rug to avoid bad publicity. Universities (and a multitude of other voices), however, have been loudly condemning "cover ups" of sexual assault.
Moreover, universities (and many others) claim to consider sexual assault to be a very serious crime. But treating it a routine internal disciplinary matter belies that claim.
Not sure who said anything about something being swept under the rug, but note that in this case, the incident was reported to the police, who arrested the plaintiff for battery.
"Would you agree? If so, why would the analysis be different for universities, students, and sexual assault?"
Because universities are public institutions that convey public benefits, and we don't generally let bureaucrats arbitrarily deny people public benefits. A bank can fire an employee if the president dreamt that the employee stole money. We certainly don't want public institutions to have the same discretion.
Also, as a practical matter, universities have proven themselves so inept at handling these cases that they should be required to do nothing more than refer the matter to law enforcement.
Because universities are public institutions that convey public benefits, and we don't generally let bureaucrats arbitrarily deny people public benefits
I've got bad news for you about college admissions...
That is bad news...
Do you ever wonder why don't just set baseline qualifications higher ed, and let that drive the number of seats? I mean, it's one thing to say that admission is more or less arbitrary, it's another to argue that it should be arbitrary.
I'm no fan of admissions requirements at all, but letting the number of seats float doesn't seem practical.
Why not? That's how it works for just about every government service, including K-12 education.
Because higher education takes more planning than K-12.
Look what happens to the schools who are mandated to take everyone above a certain level of achievement.
What happens?
The University has a contractual relationship with the student. And if the contract specifies a kangaroo court or no process, that's probably fine.
But if it specifies a process then they have to follow it, and it can't be a sham.
Sorry, but your analogy fails slightly - this is more like one customer of the bank accusing a different customer of being a thief (including accusations of theft entirely for which the bank is entirely uninvolved).
The bank then decides to close the first customer's bank account and seize their safety deposit box contents, based on nothing more than the accusation from the second customer.
There is a way to fix this crap. A few years ago there was a similar case at Georgia Tech - kangaroo court type treatment of some male students who were in fact the victims. They sued and won. The state legislature, unhappy at having the state pay the damages, withheld capital funding from GA Tech until they completely re-wrote their Title IX and student investigation policies to the satisfaction of the state senate higher ed. committee. They then required every state institution to adopt similar policies.
Yeah. A law that requires greater protection from violent crimes at public Universities than other public places strikes me as weird.
Why is that?
For instance the rules for discipline at a high school are stricter than the park across the street.
The rules for parties and overnight guests might be stricter in a dorm than at an apartment building.
Standards for employees at the office are stricter than at a bar.
OK, but why should the rules for college students be stricter than for other people?
Isn't that largely what the regulations promulgated under the last administration did?
Instead of posting interminable screeds seeking vengeance on Prof V, apparently all Holden had to do was send a Title IX complaint to UCLA claiming he was a current student. Easy peasy.
Wow. This is a deep cut.
"First, the [Complaint] alleges that Jason Zeck, UCLA's Respondent Coordinator, advised Doe in July 2017, during the pending Title IX investigation, that "no female has ever fabricated allegations against an ex-boyfriend in a Title IX setting."
That's a doozy. It's possible that it's not true, but UCLA's actions (finding the accuser credible after she lied about being a student and about breaking her ribs) would seem to corroborate the claim.
Yeah but think of the abuse she must have suffered to make her feel like she needed to fabricate her claims.
Face it, calling her a spoiled lying harridan is just continuing the abuse.
Of course females fabricate claims of this nature. They do it all the time. Statistically, it’s probably more likely that the female is lying, as lying is one of their defenses to males’ typical size and strength advantages. My view is that any time you give the female the benefit of the doubt in terms of veracity, based on her sex, you gave prima facile gender discrimination against the male. I am not saying that they should believe the guy either, as a matter of course, but believing the female because of a belief that females don’t lie about this sort of thing (sex is probably the thing that females lie the most about) is discrimination against males.
Yeah, but we had the "believe all women" movement to try to brainwash people like Mr. Zeck into believing that women don't lie, and it appears to have worked to some extent.
Also there are fallacies floating around where people claim that accusers should be believed because they have no incentive to lie. Never mind that what motivates someone to falsely accuse another person, or what motivates someone to victimize someone in the first place, are complex and can't be reduced to simple formulas.
Imagine the outcry we would hear if America maintained a system that essentially found black people guilty because of the color of their skin? That is pretty much what Title IX has become except because the protected class being victimized here are men the left could care less.
It’s only constituent service. Women vote D more often and men vote R. Just like illegal immigration, Biden is OK with all of it except Cubans that vote R.
The left cares. They are in favor of the victimization of these individuals. It was explicit policy of the Obama Administration.
While agree that as a general matter, men are often treated really shittily by university investigation processes and women are treated better, I don't see any good allegations here that would actually prove that. I see allegations that their investigation/discipline process was shitty, not that women get better treatment.