Gettysburg College: Unjust Sexual Misconduct Policy
Cases
Gettysburg College
Case Overview
After more than a year of public pressure from ÃÛÖÏãÌÒ, Gettysburg College amended its controversial Sexual Misconduct Policy. Gettysburg students are now free from the draconian policy, which failed to distinguish between an innocent, spontaneous hug and forcible rape. The school's old Sexual Misconduct Policy infringed on students' rights to due process and fundamental fairness. Despite months of agreeing to undertake an administrative review and revision of the Sexual Misconduct Policy, Gettysburg continued to maintain it. In response, FIREadded Gettysburg to its Red Alert list, where FIREhighlights the "worst of the worst" offenders against liberty on campus. In light of the policy change, Gettysburg was removed from ÃÛÖÏãÌÒ's Red Alert list. The original policy's broad definition of sexual interaction included not only sex acts but also "brushing, touching, grabbing, pinching, patting, hugging, and kissing," drawing no distinction between innocent hugging and sex crimes. The revised policy has eliminated the language equating rape with mere hugging. Instead, it prohibits "[s]exual misconduct, including sexual assault, [which] is defined as deliberate physical contact of a sexual nature without the other person's consent."