Survivor continued from page 1 stop remembering.” Paige woke up the next morning and could recall next to nothing about the night before. Her sorority sisters filled in the gaps. Another woman from the sorority had followed them back to the fra ternity house because her boyfriend did not trust Jared. The woman knocked on Jared’s door, but Jared did not respond until her boyfriend began kicking on it. When Jared fi nally answered, both he and Paige were naked. “All I thought happened was I was really drunk and made a fool of myself,” Paige said. But little things set the wheels spinning in Paige’s head. She found it odd that the next day, Jared re turned only her shirt, bra and shoes, saying that she had vomited on her pants and underwear. Jared told Paige she had gotten really sick the night before, and that he and some of the other fraternity members had taken care of her. Upon being reached, Jared would not comment on either the police case or the University proceedings. Later that year, one of Jared’s fra ternity brothers told Paige that he was not like “that guy [Jared]” and that he would not “do that” to her. “I didn’t really know anyone in the sorority until this year [and] I didn’t really know what happened,” Paige said. But “after that, I was like, I guess something else did happen. ” The longer Paige spent at the sorority, the more comfortable she became — and the more the tales of that night started pointing to one conclusion. Then two other women in her sorority said they were raped by members of Jared’s fraternity. And Paige broke down. She could not stop crying for days, she called her mom, and she began to look for help: Paige real Area resources Sexual Assault Support Services 343-SASS Office of Student Life 346-3216 ASUO Women’s Center 346-4095 Counseling Center 346-3227 Department of Public Safety 346-6666 UQ Crisis line 346-4488 Student Judicial Affairs 346-1141 Source: Alliance for Sexual Assault Prevention ized she had been raped. The process begins Telling her family and friends was one thing—but sharing her sto ry with University officials was quite another. The first place Paige turned to for help was the Sexual Assault Sup port Services, where she spoke with an advocate who helped her deter mine the next step she wanted to take. Paige decided to report the as sault to both the Eugene Police De partment and the University. To become a University case, an incident must include a violation of the Student Conduct Code that oc curs among at least two students, and must have occurred on campus. If the incident did not occur on cam pus but significantly affected the victim’s academic life, it may also stand as a University case. “We have to be able to connect [the incident] to campus,” said Chris Losthiavo, director of Student Judicial Affairs. Loschiavo said he could not com1 ment directly on Paige’s case, but would discuss the University process in more general terms. Paige said her experience happened at the fraternity house, which makes it an off-campus incident. So instead, she proved that it impacted her aca demic life. After realizing what hap pened that night—more than a year later—Paige had to lessen her class load from 18 credits to 12, and stop her internship with the Girl Scouts. Eventually the weight of knowing what had happened to her became so great that Paige had to withdraw from spring term completely and live at home with her family. The University offers sexual as sault survivors three options in such a case — either a formal, informal or informative process — and each leads to several possible outcomes. The formal process entails a hear ing in which an 18-member panel of students and faculty members makes a ruling on the case. The in formative process does not involve judicial action but instead focuses on coping with what happened. Paige decided against the formal process because it would have re quired her to be in the same room as Jared, which she did not want. She was also afraid that those speaking on Jared’s side of the case would place blame for the incident on her. The formal process could also take months because all parties in volved would need to schedule a common meeting time, and Jared would have the chance to appeal the board’s decision. Had she chosen the formal route, it might have led to Jared’s expul sion. But Paige chose the informal route, in which students found guilty can’t be expelled. Through this avenue, Paige, Jared and all other witnesses separately shared personal sides of the story with Loschiavo, who then initiated the investigation. If Jared is eventu ally found guilty, he will not be able to appeal Loschiavo’s decision. In stead, he could be forced to do any number of things, including partici pate in educational programs and LOOKING FOR A GREAT HANGOUT THIS SUMMER? THEN HEAD TO MT. HOOD COMMUNITY COLLEGE FOR... CLASSES BEGIN JUNE 25 CALL 503491-6422 FOR MORE INFORMATION In just one summer you can take care of an entire year’s worth of Science, Humanities/Social Science credits OR Complete a major portion of your language requirements at MHCC’s Summer Language Institute. It all transfers toward your degree! ©MT. HOOD COMMUNITY COLLEGE 26000 S.E. STARK ST. GRESHAM, OR 07030 r counseling, do community service, leave the residence halls or give up greek membership. Weighing the options Sheryl Eyster, assistant dean of student life, helps students navigate through either the formal, informal or informative processes. She also helps survivors to realize the as saults were not their fault. Students who do not want assistance or judi cial action may fill out anonymous forms to report the assault for statis tical purposes, Eyster added. But Eyster said she also helps point survivors of sexual assault in the direction of other campus and community resources available to them, such as SASS, the Student Health Center and the ASUO Women’s Center. Eyster said SASS is one of the most-used resources for sexual as sault cases. The program offers le gal, medical and support advocacy to sexual assault survivors as well as a 24-hour crisis and support line. SASS Community Education Co ordinator Katie Antos added that SASS members also explain the ad ditional options available to sur vivors, such as restraining orders or rape-kit exams. A rflTTP-lcit PYam - YArhir,V» only be done up to 72 hours after the incident — becomes important evi dence in many criminal cases, said Sgt. Scott McKee of the Eugene Po lice Department. McKee supervises the EPD’s violent crimes unit, which investigates sexual assault cases. He said physical evidence such as DNA and body fluid sam ples could determine whether the state prosecutes the suspect, but he added that such evidence is not al ways necessary. “If someone gets a rape-kit exam, it does keep options open,” Antos said. “But it’s a very difficult time and difficult decision someone has to make in a short amount of time. ” Although sexual assault sur vivors have an option to file a police report, Loschiavo said it is easier to find someone guilty in a conduct process than in a “court of law” be cause the standards of evidence are not as strict. He added that it is com mon for the same person found guilty through a conduct process to not be criminally convicted. To be convicted criminally, the defendant must be proven guilty be yond a reasonable doubt. When Paige filed a report with the police, the case was closed due to lack of evidence against Jared. The detective responsible for the police investigation had Paige tape record a telephone conversation with Jared, Paige said. During the call, Jared told her she had been re ally drunk and that they had oral sex, she said — a different story from what he had told her before. Picking up the pieces Reports of rape on and around campus are lower now, but Fitz patrick said DPS has participated in meetings with representatives from the Women’s Center, the University Health Center, the Counseling Cen ter and the Office of Student Life to find ways of more accurately report ing sexual assaults. Recently, the Clery Law, a federal law that requires colleges and uni versities to disclose information about crime on and around their campuses, has been criticized be cause it does not require authorities to report crimes off campus grounds. Fitzpatrick said he plans to attend a conference in June that will address the law’s vague word ing — and that will hopefully teach campus representatives how to re port crimes more accurately. “We’re making progress,” he said. Paige’s case is one the University may have to report this year because she told her story to DPS. The re sults of her case are still pending, but Paige said she expects them to come any day now. Even if Jared is not found guilty through the conduct process, he may still have to undergo educa tional programs, such as counseling sessions, to teach him about the harms of sexual assault. “The conduct process is not in tended to be punitive,” Loschiavo said. “It’s more educational.” Loschiavo added that in most cas es such as Paige’s, both parties were drunk at the time of the assault and cannot clearly remember what actu ally happened — leading to incon sistent “he said/she said” stories. The conduct code states that a per son cannot give consent when un der the influence of alcohol, but sometimes the accused cannot be deemed guilty because memories of both sides are blurry. it doesn t mean it didn t hap pen,” Loschiavo said. “The evi dence just may not be there. ” Paige said she cannot remember anything from that night after leaving the party. And Mary Wolf, an advo cate with SASS, said it isn’t uncom mon for rape victims to block out cer tain parts of their experience. Black-outs are ways of coping with the bad things that have happened, Wolf said, and can result from a cou ple of factors. One might be that the trauma associated with the incident forced the victim to repress memories of the assault. Another possibility, Wolf said, are date-rape drugs, which are oftentimes slipped in drinks and cause temporary memory loss. “I know that does happen a lot among University students, because they are vulnerable at parties and the bars,” Wolf said. The night of the incident was the first time Paige had ever been intoxicated, she said. And the guilt she felt about it stayed with her for a long time afterward. “Whenever I’d get upset, I’d drink to forget about it. I always pushed it aside,” Paige said. “I was affected by it, but I was trying to pretend it was n’t there.” Since she has faced the situation head-on, Paige said, that feeling has changed. With help from friends, family and counselors, she now knows it is nothing she should feel bad about. Not only that, Paige said, but she realizes that by putting a voice be hind the stories of rape victims, by saying that what happened to her is not right, that maybe Jared and his fraternity will get the education they need to understand how rape affects women — and justice will have been served. “I’m glad that I stood up,” Paige said. “I think once more people start speaking up, then others will come forward.” *Editor’s note: Both Paige and fared have been given false names to protect their identity. Oregon Daily Emerald P.O. Box 3159, Eugene OR 97403 The Oregon Daily Emerald is published daily Monday through Friday during the school year and Tuesday and Thursday during the summer by the Oregon Daily Emerald Publishing Co. Inc., at the Uni versity of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon. A member of the Associated Press, the Emerald operates independently of the University with offices in Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union. The Emerald is pri vate property. 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