“Last week, a South Carolina jury awarded $5.3 million to a wrongfully accused Clemson University student on defamation and civil conspiracy claims,” SAVE, a due-process advocacy group, announced in a news release yesterday. “The decision is believed to represent the largest amount ever awarded to a student falsely accused of sexual misconduct.”| Save Our Sons
Thank you for your support and interest in Help Save Our Sons. I am very grateful that you found the information on this website to be helpful, informative, and comforting. Most importantly, you discovered that you were never alone in your fight for due process campus justice, while defending your son’s innocence.| Save Our Sons
One of the stakes in November’s election is the fate of the Trump Administration’s due-process reforms for campus sexual-assault cases. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos’s new rule goes into effect Friday, August 14, 2020, and this week it passed its first legal tests.| Save Our Sons
Judge Carl J. Nichols of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia denied a motion for preliminary injunction made by the Attorneys General of Pennsylvania, sixteen other states, and D.C. to preliminarily enjoin the U.S. Department of Education’s new Title IX rules. | Save Our Sons
A judge in Washington, D.C., has denied an attempt by 17 Blue State Attorneys General as well as the District of Columbia to delay implementation of new Education Department rules requiring colleges and universities provide students accused of sexual misconduct with basic due process rights.| Save Our Sons
As soon as the U.S. Department of Education revealed its final guidelines on how colleges and universities should adjudicate allegations of sexual assault, Democrats kicked into high gear to try and stop the rules from going into effect.| Save Our Sons
Seventeen states and the District of Columbia filed this suit challenging the U.S.Department of Education’s final rule addressing Title IX obligations, which was published in the Federal Register on May 19, 2020, and is scheduled to take effect on August 14, 2020. See Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Sex in Education Programs or Activities Receiving Federal| Save Our Sons
If you’re going to challenge an agency regulation, you’d better show how it violates legal precedents. New York City’s board of education and the state of New York failed miserably in that regard, not even coming close to persuading a federal judge to either halt or push back the Friday effective date of the Department of Education’s Title IX regulation on campus sexual misconduct proceedings.| Save Our Sons
A federal judge cited potential anti-male bias in the University of Iowa’s Title IX training, and its omission of exculpatory evidence in a Title IX proceeding, in refusing to dismiss a lawsuit by an expelled student.| Save Our Sons
According to the Office for Civil Rights Blog, the new Title IX rules that will go into effect on 8/14/2020, will not be retroactive. I know that this is very disappointing, as many of America’s sons and daughters, (…really, it’s mostly sons) endured horrific mental trauma in being falsely accused, while denied due process, and the opportunity to defend oneself against an accusation, which was often anonymous.| Save Our Sons