Categories
News

Five years later: What has (or hasn’t) changed at UVA since Rolling Stone?

On November 19, 2014, Rolling Stone magazine dropped a bombshell called “A Rape on Campus: A Brutal Assault and Struggle for Justice at UVA.” Written by Sabrina Rubin Erdely, the article alleged that a UVA student named Jackie was gang raped at a party by members of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity in 2012, and that the university failed to respond adequately when a traumatized Jackie reported the incident months later. 

The story would ultimately prove to be false, a journalistic failure of colossal proportions. But it shone a spotlight on a very real problem. In the days immediately following its publication, a flood of UVA students and alumni shared their own stories of campus sexual assault in the article’s comment section, including experiences of reporting assaults to the university only to have their attackers go unpunished. Many claimed that UVA had a culture of sexual assault, especially at fraternity parties. On Grounds, thousands of students protested against “a culture that puts female students at risk,” as the group Take Back the Night put it. Phi Kappa Psi’s fraternity house was vandalized, and UVA officials temporarily suspended the university’s Greek system. 

Under scrutiny, Jackie’s story fell apart, and after a four-month investigation Charlottesville police failed to find any evidence corroborating her claims. Following an independent review by the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism, the article was retracted in April. But though the story was false, it prompted a public reckoning with how the university handles sexual violence. At the time, UVA was already under federal Title IX review by the Office of Civil Rights —a review that ultimately found that the university’s sexual assault and misconduct policies were in violation of federal law.

In the aftermath, the university undertook a wave of reforms, including revamping its policies and investing in additional staff, training, and resources around sexual assault. New student groups sprang up to provide support for survivors and speak out against sexual violence. But almost five years later, in October 2019, the university’s annual safety report revealed that 28 rapes were reported in 2018, with 20 occurring in student housing, the highest number since 2014. There were also 16 reports of dating violence, 14 reports of domestic violence, 43 reports of stalking, and 16 reports of fondling—all much higher than previous years.

Has anything really changed?

Talking about it

Alex Smith-Scales applied to UVA right after the Rolling Stone scandal. Now a 2019 graduate, she believes the climate surrounding sexual assault on Grounds went through an “interesting transformation process” during her four years there.

“I remember coming in and seeing the Green Dot presentation, and hearing about all the sexual assault prevention during our orientation week when we first got to Grounds,” she says. “It made me know [the university was] taking it seriously.”

Smith-Scales was a part of the first graduating class to undergo comprehensive training on sexual assault. Since 2015, all incoming first-year and transfer students have been required to complete online Title IX and alcohol education modules (and all students must take a refresher course every two years), as well as Green Dot (now called Hoos Got Your Back), a bystander intervention program. Beginning in 2016, the university also began requiring sexual misconduct training for graduate students and student employees, and the NCAA requires that all athletic department staff and student athletes receive annual training.

During her first days at UVA, Smith-Scales was also happy to learn about the many student groups against sexual assault, and knew she wanted to get involved. In her second year, she joined Take Back The Night, and later became co-chair. During her fourth year, she served on the Sexual Violence Prevention Coalition, the umbrella group that helps coordinate advocacy and peer education efforts on Grounds.

UVA officials have pointed to these increased outreach and education efforts, both on the part of administration and students, as the reason behind the rise in sexual assaults reported to the University Police Department, university officials, and other law enforcement.

In addition to the uptick in reported assaults in the university’s safety report, the 2019 Association of American Universities Campus Climate Survey, which gathers data on student experiences and perceptions around sexual assault and misconduct, also reported an increase in sexual assaults at UVA, specifically among men, compared to the 2015 survey

But a rise in reports doesn’t mean a rise in incidents—and in fact, may be a sign that the stigma surrounding sexual assault is lifting. 

“What we find with most, if not all, interpersonal crimes, [is that] when you draw attention to it, and you tell people ‘this is not okay,’ then people who have experienced it start to feel more comfortable coming forward,” says Abby Palko, director of the Maxine Platzer Lynn Women’s Center at UVA. 

According to Sheri Owen, community outreach director at the Sexual Assault Resource Agency, the #MeToo movement could be another reason more students are reporting sexual assaults.

“In the last two and a half years, there’s just really been an explosion of support around survivors. Survivors are feeling like they are being heard and that people are listening to them,” she says. 

Abby Palko has served as director of the Maxine Platzer Lynn Women’s Center at UVA for three and a half years. PC: Courtesy of UVA

Palko believes the movement has had a rather “complicated impact,” as there have been some people not held responsible for their crimes, “reinforcing an old message of, ‘No one’s going to believe you.’”

However, she agrees that it has brought the conversation of sexual assault to the national forefront, encouraging more survivors to come forward.

“It has people who before weren’t talking about it, talking about it, and that can help make it feel safer for survivors to share their experiences,” she says. “There have been some high-profile examples of people being held accountable afterwards; that also makes it feel safer.”

A new approach 

Perhaps the biggest change is the way the university has remade its Title IX process. 

Title IX is the federal law prohibiting gender discrimination; in the 1990s, the Supreme Court ruled that it can be used to require schools to respond appropriately to reports of sexual harassment and sexual violence against students.

In 2011, the Department of Education issued what is now known as the “Dear Colleague” letter, declaring that colleges and universities receiving federal funding had responsibilities under Title IX to ensure the safety of all students from sexual assault, particularly female students. 

Soon afterward, the Office of Civil Rights opened what would become a years-long compliance review of UVA’s Title IX policies, along with those of dozens of other colleges.

Meanwhile, beginning in 2014, the university performed its own comprehensive evaluation of its existing Title IX policies and practices.

In spring 2015, it developed a new interim policy for handling sexual violence complaints and made it available for public comment. After receiving more than 600 comments from members of the UVA community, the university revised and implemented the interim policy, effective July 1, 2015, with approval from OCR that it fully complied with Title IX.

The OCR’s investigation finally came to an end in September 2015, finding that the university’s previous sexual assault and sexual misconduct policies “did not provide for the prompt and equitable resolution of student and employee complaints,” and were in violation of Title IX. It determined that “a basis for a hostile environment existed for affected students” and that “the university failed to eliminate a hostile environment and take steps to prevent its recurrence,” specifically from 2008 to 2014. The investigation also concluded that, from 2008 to 2012, the Title IX coordinator did not adequately oversee and coordinate all Title IX complaints.

After an intense set of negotiations, UVA agreed, among other things, to continue to follow its new Title IX policies, provide training to students and employees, improve outreach to students, and develop a system for tracking reports and investigations of sexual misconduct. It also committed to reviewing reports from 2011-2014 to determine whether they were appropriately addressed, and allowed the OCR to review and monitor its response to reports during the 2015-16 academic year.

To better address Title IX reports, in 2015 the university hired a full-time Title IX coordinator, “who participates in the initial evaluation [of reports] and now takes the lead regarding any informal or formal resolutions of Title IX reports,” says university spokesman Brian Coy. 

The same year, the university also hired an associate vice president to lead the Equal Opportunity and Civil Rights office. Since then, EOCR has grown to have seven full-time Title IX staff, including four full-time investigators. 

Back in 2014, then-associate dean Nicole Eramo was one of three deputy Title IX coordinators, and as head of the Sexual Misconduct Board she was heavily featured in the Rolling Stone piece, which presented her as being more concerned about the university’s reputation than Jackie’s alleged assault. (Eramo sued the magazine for defamation, and won.) Reflecting back on her experience in a recent Facebook post, Eramo wrote: “The job as it was structured was impossible—a perspective that I believe is well supported by the fact that 7 full-time staff members and a host of others do now what was, on paper, only 50% of my job at the time.”

More money, more resources

In addition to beefing up its staff and training, UVA has given increased funding and support to organizations that assist sexual assault survivors on Grounds. 

Over the past five years, Counseling & Psychological Services has nearly doubled its staff, which includes licensed social workers, counselors, psychologists, nurse practitioners, and psychiatrists. 

“CAPS staff are trained in a variety of interventions, including evidence-based trauma therapies, and are a confidential resource for students seeking support following sexual assault and other forms of interpersonal violence,” says Coy. 

The Women’s Center has also received more funding and support from the university. Since 2015, it has created four new counseling positions, including two trauma counselors, a case manager, and a resident in counseling with special expertise and experience in the role of cultural, racial, gender, and sexual identity in mental health. 

The center’s counselors provide trauma-informed treatment for students of all genders (not just women), while its confidential advocate “works with students who are going through the Title IX process, if they need that type of support,” says Palko, helping them with paperwork, connecting them with resources, and accompanying them to hearings. 

All of the center’s counselors (with only a few exceptions) are confidential employees, meaning they are not required to share information about students or their experiences with the university’s Title IX office. 

Women’s Center interns help run educational events like the survivor support network trainings, which explain the neurobiology of trauma and “help people understand what someone who has been assaulted is going through and how they can provide support to them,” says Palko.

Outside of the university, Charlottesville’s Sexual Assault Resource Agency also offers support. 

Whenever a student reports a sexual assault at UVA’s Student Health center, staff calls an advocate from SARA, who provides emotional support during the physical evidence recovery kit exam, and can assist victims with follow-up medical and counseling appointments and any subsequent criminal process. Victims who choose to have that exam do not have to make a report to the police, the university, or any other agency, and evidence will not be submitted without their written consent. 

“Our advocacy coordinator also works very closely with Title IX and sits with students during any type of Title IX interviews,” says Owen. “And our outreach team regularly goes and talks with fraternities and sororities…[and] trains all of the Madison House helpline volunteers.”

The UVA Clothesline Project and the Red Flag Campaign invite survivors of sexual violence to share their stories anonymously, and display their messages on Grounds. PC: Take Back The Night and The Women’s Center at UVA

A change in (rape) culture?

But have all of these changes made an actual impact on what students have called UVA’s “rape culture?” What is the atmosphere surrounding sexual assault on Grounds like today? 

From the conversations she has had post-graduation with UVA’s Program Coordinator for Prevention Rachel Kiliany, Smith-Scales believes that “things are on the right track.” Just this year, One Less, a female and gender nonconforming sexual assault peer education group, and One in Four, an all-male identified group, came together to create CORE (Culture of Respected Educators), a gender-inclusive sexual violence advocacy group, which Smith-Scales thinks is “a huge step in the right direction.”

“It’s really helpful to make it more of an accessible space to people who don’t fit into the gender binary, or who maybe just don’t want to be in a single gender space,” she says.

However, during her time with Take Back The Night, she struggled to diversify the conversation around sexual assault and to reach marginalized communities with the group’s events.

“There is definitely a culture and a stereotype of it just being for people who are members of white traditional Greek life,” she says. 

Smith-Scales also saw an overall decrease in participation in sexual assault advocacy. By the time she became TBTN co-chair, “the people that were getting involved were people that came having a desire to fight sexual assault,” not people with a newfound interest in the cause.

“Outreach just became really difficult. I think one of the reasons was because the environment and the culture got oversaturated with causes to care about. I feel like the first one was President Trump being elected to office…and then the second one being August 11th and 12th,” she says. “That really changed…where people put their justice efforts at UVA.”

During the rise of the #MeToo movement, Smith-Scales believes there was an increase in attention on sexual assault on Grounds. However, she does not think it gained much momentum.

“Rolling Stone was so easy to unify on because it was directly affecting our community,” she says. “With #MeToo the conversations became a little bit more nuanced. They weren’t just about college students.”

She ultimately feels “like the university on their end, and also the university students…really just shifted their focus onto different things,” she says. “It was really disheartening to see that the passion wasn’t as present as when the Rolling Stone situation came about.”

In the 2019 campus climate survey, 38 percent of female respondents and 20 percent of male respondents said sexual assault and misconduct was “very” or “extremely” problematic­—a significant percentage, but lower than in 2015, when those numbers were 49 percent for women and 28 percent for men.   

Angela (not her real name), a fourth-year student, is one who believes that the culture surrounding sexual assault is “still a really big problem” at UVA.

“A lot of cases are still not dealt with properly,” she says. “It’s hard for survivors to come out and actually talk about things because…of the confidential/non-confidential employee [policy],” which requires all responsible employees (including professors and resident advisors) to report prohibited conduct to the university’s Title IX coordinator.

“As a survivor, I have friends who are RAs, and I can’t even talk to them about my experience because then they’d have to report it,” she says. “That’s just kind of messed up.”

And like Smith-Scales, she feels that “the Grounds-wide conversation has kind of dwindled since Rolling Stone.”

“When it’s talked about, it’s among groups that are actively trying to bring up the issue,” says another fourth-year student. “It’s not really with the general population.”

A variety of student groups regularly host events and campaigns against sexual assault at UVA, including Take Back The Night and the Red Flag Campaign. PC: The Women’s Center at UVA

Room for improvement

Ultimately, while the university has made a lot of positive changes, students say there is still more work to be done.

Smith-Scales wishes that the university would put more momentum behind the conversations surrounding sexual assault, as well as hire more staff to assist Kiliany.

Kiliany “is incredible at her job, but she is the only prevention coordinator when other universities have dedicated teams to causes like this,” says Smith-Scales. 

Others hope the university will improve its initiatives and resources for sexual assault, becoming more proactive than reactive.

“The university needs to do more than just run those programs when you’re a first-year, and the review you get when you’re a third-year,” says Angela. It also pushes “a lot of students into CAPS,” when “CAPS doesn’t have the capacity to serve all students.”

Though fraternities are not the only perpetrators of sexual assault, Rebecca (not her real name) believes the university’s frat culture is still a “big contributer” to the problem, and that administration needs to do a better job of reprimanding Greek organizations. 

“There’s a lot of things that go on within those organizations that remain unchecked,” she says. “At the end of the day, there’s a lot of big donors to the school that may be former members of a fraternity or a sorority. The university knows if they hand down a really harsh punishment to these groups, they’re not going to receive funding.”

“Check a basement of any frat on Friday or Saturday night, and you’ll see some questionable stuff,” she adds. 

And, as students like Angela have pointed out, the university’s mandatory reporting policy needs improvement, says SARA’s Owens. She says students can be afraid to report or talk about sexual assault because of uncertainty over who is a mandatory reporter and who isn’t. “I think all intentions were good, but in some instances…[it’s] turned out to not be as good as we had hoped.”

Meanwhile, federal guidance on Title IX policies may be changing under Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos. Pulling back from the Obama administration’s efforts to increase protections for victims, the proposed guidelines would add new requirements designed to protect the rights of students accused of sexual assault, including the ability to cross-examine accusers. They would also narrow the definition of sexual harassment and restrict administrators to investigating only certain incidents, as well as allow universities to set their own standards of evidence for finding an accused student guilty of assault.

In 2016, UVA came under a federal Title IX investigation that was sparked by an individual complaint from a former male student who claimed that he was discriminated against in the investigation process based on his gender and disability, according to a UVA spokesperson at the time. Coy declined to comment on the specifics of that case or another investigation opened in February 2018, both of which are still active. 

Once the new regulations are made official, UVA will determine if any changes to its Title IX policy and procedures are necessary. 

Smith-Scales believes the changes could make universities less accountable, putting an increased burden back on students to demand justice for victims. 

“It also sends a message from our government that they don’t care and that the sexual assault and harassment isn’t something we will prioritize,” she says. “That message in itself will lead to losses.”

Updated 12/5 to correct the number of staff positions added to the Women’s Center at UVA

Categories
News

Court costs: After winning jury trial, Eramo settles

Nearly two years after filing a more than $7.5 million defamation suit against Rolling Stone, its parent company and “A Rape on Campus” reporter Sabrina Rubin Erdely—and five months after a jury awarded her $3 million—former UVA associate dean Nicole Eramo settled her case, likely for much less.

The November 19, 2014, Rolling Stone article shook UVA to its core and became a national sensation—until the story told by alleged gang-rape victim Jackie began to unravel. By December 5, 2014, Rolling Stone announced it no longer had faith in Jackie’s tale, and in April 2015, following a lacerating analysis by Columbia Journalism Review, the magazine retracted the story.

A month later, Eramo, the university’s go-to sexual assault administrator, filed suit. Among her complaints were that the article made her the “chief villain” in a tale of institutional indifference to rape, damaged her reputation and caused her emotional distress.

The jury trial lasted 17 days last fall in the U.S. District courthouse, culminating in the jury’s November 7 $3 million award.

Libel attorney Alice Neff Lucan says it’s not that uncommon to settle defamation cases after a jury verdict.

“One reason for a plaintiff to settle is to avoid more legal fees,” she says. “Any libel case is ripe for appeal.”

And indeed, the same day the jury made its award, Rolling Stone attorney Elizabeth McNamara said the magazine would appeal.

In February, Rolling Stone asked a federal judge to set aside the jury’s verdict, arguing that Rolling Stone’s December 2014 publication of the story with an editor’s note expressing lack of confidence in Jackie’s story did not constitute republication with actual malice. Judge Glen Conrad had not ruled on the motion when the case was settled.

Filing such a motion is “standard operating procedure,” says Lucan, who said she hadn’t followed the trial. “I’m assuming without knowing that the settlement is less than the award.”

A crowdsourcing website to help pay Eramo’s legal fees raised $31,086 of its $500,000 goal from 178 donors. “Nicole’s lawyers have agreed to discount their legal fees, but lawsuits are expensive and Nicole needs our help to cover the costs of litigation,” says the CrowdRise fundraiser page created by True Hoos.

And the cost of a trial that ran more than three weeks? “You could buy a couple of houses with what that cost,” says Lucan.

In January, Eramo’s attorneys at Clare Locke filed with the court a bill of costs incurred for the trial for $144,673, including more than $90,000 for transcripts.

Besides the expense of fighting an appeal, Lucan says there are other reasons to settle. “Being involved in a lawsuit is so draining,” she says. Emotionally it’s very difficult, and there’s the “personal wear and tear that really is part of the costs,” she says.

In a statement, the magazine says, “Rolling Stone, Sabrina Rubin Erdely and Nicole Eramo have come to an amicable resolution. The terms are confidential.”

And Eramo’s attorney, Libby Locke, says, “We are delighted that this dispute is now behind us, as it allows Nicole to move on and focus on doing what she does best, which is supporting victims of sexual assault.”

The settlement gives both sides control and it also ends it, says Lucan. “Maybe vindication for Dean Eramo means more than the dollar award.”

Categories
News

Fraternity knew Jackie’s claims sketchy, but kept silent, says Rolling Stone

The national Phi Kappa Psi organization was in court last week seeking to quash subpoenas from Rolling Stone, which contends both the national and UVA chapter of the fraternity knew there were “factual discrepancies” in Jackie’s story of a gang rape before the magazine published its now infamous “A Rape on Campus,” but kept quiet about those discrepancies to both Rolling Stone and to UVA then-associate dean Nicole Eramo.

Had the fraternity spoken up, the article “never would have been published,” said Rolling Stone in a court document.

The local Phi Kappa Psi chapter, scene of Jackie’s tale of a now-discredited alleged gang rape, is suing Rolling Stone for $25 million, the third defamation case stemming from the November 19, 2014, article.

Last fall, a jury awarded Eramo $3 million, a verdict Rolling Stone is trying to get set aside. And a suit filed by three fraternity brothers was thrown out.

At the April 5 hearing, the attorney for the national Phi Kappa Psi organization argued it was a separate legal entity from the local chapter. Rolling Stone’s subpoenas seeking information from all 99 chapters was “absolutely invasive” and “absolutely unnecessary,” said attorney Dirk McClanahan. “They don’t need to hunt down our dirty laundry.”

While the local chapter will produce the documents requested, he said, “The guys in Des Moines who are busted for hazing or drinking are categorically irrelevant.”

Rolling Stone attorney Jonathon Fazzola disagreed and said embarrassing members affect both the national organization and chapters throughout the country. “They’re inextricably linked,” he said.

Two months before the Rolling Stone story was published, said Fazzola, the national organization was contacted by UVA with Jackie’s allegations. It sent someone to the chapter to investigate, and prepared talking points to the media and training sessions—and consulted attorneys about libel.

Fazzola further argued that Phi Psi initially found Jackie’s allegations plausible because “it knows its own culture” and that its investigation “could be an admission it knows its own reputation.”

While Judge Richard Moore found the latter “a stretch,” he acknowledged Rolling Stone’s efforts. “If they can show [Phi Kappa Psi] already had a lousy reputation,” the article “can’t hurt it,” he said.

Moore also mentioned 2006, the year Liz Seccuro saw charges brought against Phi Psi member William Beebe for a 1984 rape at the UVA chapter. His involvement came to light when he wrote an apology letter to her 21 years later as part of a 12-step program. Beebe was convicted and served 18 months in prison.

‘It’s relevant that there have been sexual assault allegations at chapters,” said Rolling Stone attorney Liz McNamara, who defended the magazine in last fall’s federal court trial.

Rolling Stone also argued that the national fraternity did not have standing to quash the subpoenas because it was not a party in the suit, pointing out that its insurer, Holmes Murphy & Associates, had not objected to the discovery requests.

McClanahan maintained that the national org “is a victim here, too,” and that Rolling Stone had an agenda against all fraternities. He said the magazine’s 29 subpoenas are “unduly burdensome” and an attempt to “terrorize” the chapters.

“They’re saying, ‘We believe Phi Kappa Psi could be institutionalizing rape and we want to explore that further,’” said McClanahan. “What we’re getting is blind conjecture.”

Judge Moore took a break to read the subpoenas. Upon his return, he said, “I’m just not persuaded most of what’s asked for is relevant. Most are too broad.”

He quashed 13 of Rolling Stone’s 29 subpoenas.

After the hearing, Rolling Stone seemed undeterred by the denials.

“The local fraternity here is seeking a whopping $25 million in damages,” said McNamara in an email. ”Clearly their reputation is intertwined with the national reputation of Phi Kappa Psi.” PKP national has been very involved from the outset, she said, “and we believe it’s appropriate to get discovery from the national organization, and the judge agreed with us on that point.”

The case is scheduled for a 10-day jury trial starting October 23.

Categories
News

In brief: Dissent in the air, taco shop heist and more

Rolling Stone resists

The magazine was back in court February 9 in Roanoke to ask a judge to throw out a $3 million jury award to UVA administrator Nicole Eramo for defamation, arguing Eramo didn’t prove reporter Sabrina Erdely acted with actual malice and that running a correction isn’t defamatory republication. Judge Glen Conrad will rule in a few weeks.

Behind-the-scenes civil rights activist

Paul Saunier, who helped recruit black students to UVA in the ’60s, support them once here and who convinced most Corner businesses to desegregate in 1962 while he served as an adviser to the university’s then-president Edgar Shannon, died February 8 at age 97.

Patriot boycott

Super Bowl winner Chris Long, a St. Anne’s-Belfield and UVA grad and son of Howie, says he will not join his fellow New England Patriots in the traditional visit to the White House.

Coran Capshaw
Coran Capshaw. Photo Ashley Twigg

Still powerful

Music and development magnate Coran Capshaw comes in at No. 11 on Billboard’s Power 100 list—he was No. 7 last year.

Psychic’s husband sentenced

Donnie Marks will spend 33 months in prison and was ordered to pay $5.5 million in restitution to the victims he and his wife, Sandra Marks, aka Psychic Catherine, bilked when she claimed she could remove curses by cleansing large sums of cash. Marks, who is serving 30 months, met her marks at Synchronicity, a spiritual facility in Nelson.

Photo: Tom McGovern
No tacos were harmed during the Brazos burglary. Photo Tom McGovern

Brazos bandits

The Austin-style taco shop posted a video of two hooded thieves attempting to break into its cash register with what appeared to be a hammer over the weekend. The “knuckleheads,” as Brazos Tacos called them on Instagram, were caught by the Charlottesville Police Department.

Weekend warriors

stewart-draego-Amos
GOP candidate for governor Corey Stewart, center, with Joe Draego, left, who sued City Council, and Thaddeus Dionne Alexander. Photo Eze Amos

Demonstrations are becoming the new norm since the election of Donald Trump, and last Saturday saw at least three occasions of citizens exercising their rights to assemble. Although mostly peaceful, the demonstration and counterprotest at Lee Park got loud.

_L4C4257
Counterprotesters. Photo Eze Amos
kessler-amos
A local blogger with Harper Lee’s book. Photo Eze Amos

Gubernatorial candidate Corey Stewart came to denounce City Council’s decision to remove the statue of General Robert E. Lee, bringing with him Thaddeus Dionne Alexander, who became a social media sensation for telling Hillary Clinton supporters to “stop being crybabies.” Stewart was met by protesters shouting, “Hey hey, ho ho, white supremacy’s got to go,” and his campaign described them as “an aggressive mob of liberal protesters.” WINA’s Rob Schilling captured on video WCHV’s Joe Thomas being verbally blasted by a bullhorn-wielding demonstrator.

schilling-stewart-Amos
Rob Schilling and Corey Stewart. Photo Eze Amos
IMG_4185
Jennifer Tidwell, holding sign up, protests across town at Congressman Tom Garrett’s office.

Congressman Tom Garrett’s Berkmar Crossing office has been the venue of regular Tuesday protests since he was sworn in, and Charlottesville NOW’s February 11 protest brought hundreds to decry the defunding of Planned Parenthood. Down the road, a smaller anti-abortion group carried signs outside of Planned Parenthood’s facility.

Richmond watch

Last week was crossover week, when each chamber had completed work on its own bills and began considering legislation passed by the other body. Local delegates had these bills passed.

Delegate Steve Landes. File photoSteve Landes, R-Weyers Cave

Free speech on campus bill: For when the First Amendment isn’t enough.

Beloved bill redux: Requires boards of education to notify parents when materials have explicit content that would be defined as felonious sexual assault.

Photo: Amy JacksonRob Bell, R-Albemarle

Tebow bill: Bell carries his bill for about the 18th time that would allow homeschooled kids to play public school sports. The governor vetoed it last year.

Delegate David Toscano will stick around as House minority leader for at least one more session. Submitted photoDavid Toscano, D-Charlottesville

Misdemeanor DNA: Resolution requesting a study on expanding the use of DNA is headed to the Crime Commission for consideration.

Matt Fariss

Matt Fariss, R-Rustburg

Dangerous dog: Amends law to specify a nip doesn’t make a canine a menace.

Quote of the week

“Newby Gov candidate @Denver4Governor’s inexperience is showing. Doesn’t he know I voted AGAINST moving Lee statue?!”—Mayor Mike Signer responds to Denver Riggleman on Twitter

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: April Verch

Singing, step-dancing fiddle player April Verch shows her roots in trademark fireball performances that channel the founding players of traditional folk music. The Ottawa Valley Canadian has been onstage since the age of 6, and with no sign of slowing down at age 38, she’s releasing The April Verch Anthology on February 17, an 18-track collection spanning from 1998-2015. Last year’s MerleFest appearance inspired Rolling Stone to name her one of the “12 Best Things We Saw at MerleFest.”

Friday, February 3. $16-18, 7pm. C’ville Coffee, 1301 Harris St. 817-2633.

Categories
News

In brief: Payne, Ross outta here, Woodriff buying arena and more

Payne, Ross closing

When politicians need flack assistance stat, there’s one number they call: Payne, Ross and Associates. And around the beginning of the new year, Charlottesville’s public relations institution will close its doors after almost 35 years. “It’s a new vision,” says principal Susan Payne. Partner Lisa Ross Moorefield says the closing is a mutual decision, and she’ll be “exploring less structured options.”

Woodriff confirms arena deal

Hedge fund founder Jaffray Woodriff is buying the Main Street Arena, as previously reported by C-VILLE. Attorney Valerie Long says, “Our client is now the purchaser of the ice park for an entity he’s involved with.” His QIM firm is not involved in the deal, and he is not ready to talk about whether there will be an ice park in another location, says Long.

sydneyBlair
Courtesy UVA

R.I.P. Sydney Blair

Beloved UVA creative writing prof Sydney Blair, 67, died unexpectedly December 12 after being hospitalized for pancreatitis. She joined the faculty in 1986, won the Virginia Prize for Fiction for her novel Buffalo in 1991 and wrote many stories, articles and reviews for journals.

Why it’s not paying for West Main

UVA generates $4.8 billion in economic activity in this region, according to a recent study. The university has been cool to city suggestions that it pitch in on the West Main streetscape project, saying it already significantly contributes to the local economy. UVA doesn’t pay Charlottesville property taxes.

Albemarle County Executive Tom Foley says the good news about an otherwise grim budget is that no one gets laid off and county employees get a raise. Staff photo
Tom Foley. Staff photo

County exec wanted

Albemarle’s Tom Foley is riding into the sunset, er, to Stafford County, to be head administrator there. Foley started in Albemarle in 1999, and succeeded Bob Tucker as county exec in 2011.

Day in the sun

Solar Panel 2 by Dominion“The sun is my almighty physician,” once said the ubiquitous Thomas Jefferson.

In a small room at UVA on December 6, packed wall-to-wall with people eager to celebrate the installation of 1,589 solar panels on university rooftops, President of Dominion Virginia Power Bob Blue said, “I’m not exactly sure what he meant by that.” But what he does know is that UVA is one of 10 groups participating in Dominion’s Solar Partnership Program, and once all the panels are installed atop Ruffner Hall and the University Bookstore, they will generate 364 kilowatts of energy—or enough to power 91 homes.

Bright future

  • 965 panels, which could power the equivalent of 52 homes, are already installed
  • Students and Dominion will study the energy pumped back into UVA’s grid
  • The school’s 2008 Delta Force sustainability program reduced energy usage in 37 buildings, saving $22 million in energy costs so far

Steak of America

The Downtown Mall will be Bank of America-less, but will have another steakhouse. Staff photoWhen Bank of America closes its branch doors downtown in February, it leaves a grand 1916 building in its wake that will house a steakhouse, according to building owner Hunter Craig. And while he declined to identify the grilled-meat purveyor, he did say it would be locally owned, not a national chain.

Also inhabiting 300 E. Main St., which began as Peoples Bank and during its 100-year history has morphed into Virginia National Bank, Sovran Bank and NationsBank before Bank of America, will be…another bank. “Not Virginia National Bank,” specified Craig, who sits on the VNB board of directors.

Other as-yet-undisclosed tenants will lease office space in the building.

Quote of the week

“Plaintiff threatens to set a dangerous precedent for news organizations and those who rely upon them for accurate up-to-the-minute news throughout the country.”—Brief filed by eight news organizations in support of Rolling Stone’s motion to overturn Nicole Eramo’s $3 million judgment

Correction 12/19: Sydney Blair’s age and date of death were both wrong in the original version.

Categories
News

In brief: Screwdrivered, Uber option and more

And the next election cycle begins

platania
Joe Platania. Susan Parmar Photography

Charlottesville Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Joe Platania says he’ll seek his boss’ job in 2017. Commonwealth’s Attorney Dave Chapman plans to retire after 24 years as the city’s top prosecutor. And state Senator Bryce Reeves officially threw his hat into the lieutenant governor’s ring, vying with two other Republicans who want the nomination.

Screwdriver stabbing

City police say Keith Lamont Brooks, 40, stabbed a family member with a screwdriver December 3 at 4am in the 800 block of St. Charles Avenue and fled the scene before police arrived. He was arrested the following day without incident. Brooks’ rap sheet includes possession of cocaine, grand larceny, multiple probation violations and driving as a habitual offender.

Streak snapped

UVA men’s basketball’s 24 home game-winning streak ended December 3 when West Virginia’s Mountaineers cleaned house at JPJ with a 66-57 victory.

Rolling Stone rebuffs verdict

eramo-eze-amos
Nicole Eramo’s $3 million award is being challenged. Photo Eze Amos

The magazine filed motions December 5 asking a judge to overturn the jury’s $3 million award to UVA administrator Nicole Eramo, contending Eramo did not prove Rolling Stone and reporter Sabrina Erdely acted with actual malice in publishing “A Rape on Campus” in 2013.

Look out, Uber

HyperFocal: 0Ride-share competitor Lyft began offering rides and gig economy jobs December 1. New passengers using the code VALOVE got $5 off their first ride.

Don’t give money to strangers who call

The Albemarle Sheriff’s Office is NOT demanding immediate payment of fines for skipping jury duty and warns of a holiday scam.

Quiz: Real or fake?

toy guns_edit
Albemarle County Police

Safety first

Police officers in America killed at least 28 juveniles and adults carrying BB or pellet guns in 2015, in instances in which the officers did not realize the firearms were fake. In preparation for every parent’s inevitable Christmas shopping frenzy, the Albemarle County and Charlottesville police departments are preparing a program to inform families of the dangers of buying and using these faux firearms.

“We’re hoping to prevent a local tragedy,” says ACPD Crime Prevention Specialist Andrew Gluba, adding that there have been several instances locally in which law enforcement officers encountered toy gun-toting juveniles. “We’re not saying don’t let your kids play with these, we’re saying educate them if they do,” he says.

How to help:

  • Don’t buy toy guns (i.e. BB/pellet/airsoft).
  • Talk to your kids about the dangers of how their toy guns can be perceived.
  • Teach them to put the gun down immediately if confronted by police or someone else.

Answer key: 1. Fake 2. Fake 3. Fake 4. Fake 5. Fake 6. Fake 7. Fake. All guns pictured were confiscated locally.

Quote of the week

“This whole issue of matters by the public is a tempest in a teapot. Just ignore it. You’ve got far more important things to do.”

—John Pfaltz at the December 5 City Council meeting, where petitioners sought to throw out new comment procedures

Categories
News

Day 17: Jury awards $3 million in Rolling Stone defamation trial

As former UVA dean Nicole Eramo’s marathon $7.5 million defamation suit against Rolling Stone rolled into its fourth week, a jury awarded her $3 million in damages Monday for the magazine’s November 2014 story, “A Rape on Campus.”

“This was nothing short of a complete repudiation of Rolling Stone and Sabrina Erdely’s malicious journalism,” said Eramo attorney Libby Locke.

The award put $2 million of the liability on reporter Erdely for statements in her story and post-publication publicity, and found Rolling Stone liable for $1 million for republishing the story December 5, 2014, with an editor’s note saying it found one-named source Jackie no longer credible.

“I’m certainly happy to be putting it behind me and getting to the next chapter of my life,” said Eramo after the jury award.

“The real win was Friday and the verdict and the public repudiation of Rolling Stone,” said Locke. “Shame on them. Shame on them.”

The Rolling Stone legal team, along with Erdely and managing deputy editor Sean Woods, left by the federal courthouse back door, and when spotted in The Pointe lounge at the Omni Hotel, declined to comment, but seemed rather cheery despite the jury’s decision.

“Yeah, we’re going to appeal,” said attorney Elizabeth McNamara.

Friday, November 4, was when, after two-and-a-half days of deliberation, the jury found that Rolling Stone, Erdely and Wenner Media acted with actual malice when it published the now debunked tale of UVA student Jackie’s alleged gang rape at Phi Kappa Psi and its assertions that Eramo discouraged victims from reporting assaults and had a “nonreaction” when Jackie told her about two additional gang rapes at Phi Psi.

The jury was back in court Monday for the damages portion of the trial.

Rolling Stone attorney David Paxton, representing a chastened Rolling Stone that heard the jury’s verdict “loud and clear” on Friday and wanted “to take our medicine,” he said, reminded jurors that the scope of the initial suit had been narrowed to three statements in the story, and not the article as a whole nor the illustration of Eramo that she said made her “look like the devil.”

After the Rolling Stone article came out, Eramo’s anguish was so great, she said she curled into a ball, wanted to disappear and considered suicide, testimony that had one juror wiping a tear and another nodding her head in agreement with the harm Eramo said the story caused her.

When she first read the story, Eramo found its account of a gang rape “heartbreaking,” and she was confused. She said, “I didn’t understand why [Jackie] didn’t let me help her.”

Then she read the parts about her, and said, with her voice breaking, it was “somebody who had my name, and then the picture was somebody who had my face, but not somebody I recognized.”

The depiction of her discouraging survivors from reporting their assaults “was devastating to me,” she said. “That was exactly the opposite of what I tried to do.”

Eramo described the “surreal” feeling of walking through Grounds after the story came out with everybody upset. A SlutWalk to end rape culture ended up protesting outside her office, and “created the picture that was in the story,” she said.

Fearing for her physical safety, her husband would pick her up from work at night. She turned the more than 200 vicious e-mails she received over to University Police, and she read a sampling of them:

“I’m sickened by what I have read and you should be ashamed of yourself and how you treat victims of sexual assault.”

“You are a despicable human being.”

Another had the subject line: “Dean of rape.”

Eramo told the jury she cried constantly and couldn’t sleep or eat. Using student lingo, she said, “I was a hot mess.” She retreated into herself and “felt like a pox upon people near me,” she added.

The damages hearing also included testimony about her breast cancer. A double mastectomy had been scheduled for December 19, 2014, exactly one month after the Rolling Stone article was published.

By the end of January, she had an infection and ended up in the hospital for nine days, which caused her to abandon reconstruction and push back chemotherapy.

“I felt seriously debilitated going into my surgery,” she said.

Her doctor, Kant Lin, testified, “Stress is a very insidious thing,” and created “an unfavorable situation for surgical healing.”

Her husband, Kirt von Daacke, a UVA history professor and assistant dean, described the impact of the Rolling Stone story: “Holy cow. When the article hit, it was as if someone set the University of Virginia on fire.”

The day the article came out, he heard his wife crying at 5am. “And it got worse from there,” he said, with protests outside her office and a faculty e-mail chain calling for her to be fired. “I’ve never heard so many angry people talking about my wife,” he said.

“They destroyed her,” he said.

And on the Sunday after the article came out, he heard “sobbing from the abyss,” he said. “It was a wail I’ve never heard from her. She was curled up in the fetal position in a little ball. I don’t know how we got through that.”

He also noted, “To me, it looks like she’s aged five years in the past two years. It’s hard when you’re nearly 50 to have the career you thought you had taken away.”

Eramo’s attorney Tom Clare directed the jury to consider the injury his client had suffered from pain, embarrassment, humiliation or mental suffering. Injury to her reputation and her professional standing, including the “loss of her dream job,” should also be part of the award, he said.

“Nicole’s great-grandchildren will never know her,” he said. “What they will know is what’s on the Internet.”

Paxton countered that when her descendants Google her, “the story is going to be about the vindication of Ms. Eramo.”

Categories
News

Judgment day: Jury rules in Eramo’s favor

As soon as the clerk in federal court read the first verdict finding actual malice in Nicole Eramo’s defamation lawsuit against Rolling Stone reporter Sabrina Erdely, the UVA administrator crumpled against her attorney.

And as the clerk went on to read more than two dozen statements upon which the jury had to decide in the suit against Erdely, Rolling Stone and Wenner Media LLC, with only a few exceptions, the jurors found actual malice on each count November 4.

“Today was a really good day,” said Eramo attorney Libby Locke with her client at her side, along with Eramo’s supporters. “We said all along Rolling Stone published a false article.”

Rolling Stone attorney Elizabeth McNamara declined to comment. Erdely remained composed in the courtroom, but she was weeping as she went out the back door of the U.S. District Court.

The decision came after 16 days in court and two and a half days of jury deliberation in Eramo’s $7.5 million suit stemming from the November 2014 Rolling Stone story, “A Rape on Campus.” The story, which recounted the tale of Jackie, who claimed she was gang raped at Phi Kappa Psi, quickly unraveled, and by April 2015, after a searing examination by Columbia Graduate School of Journalism, Rolling Stone retracted the story.

Eramo, who was in charge of handling victims of sexual assault and the Sexual Assault Misconduct Board at UVA, filed suit the next month, contending that the story portrayed her as a callous and indifferent administrator, according to Erdely’s preconceived storyline.

A judge earlier had ruled that Eramo is a public figure, and the jury had to determine whether Rolling Stone acted with actual malice in its publication of the story and three specific statements that Eramo contends are false: that she discouraged Jackie from sharing her story, that she said, “Nobody wants to send their daughter to the rape school,” and that she had a “non reaction” when Jackie told her in April 2014 that two other young women had been gang raped at the same fraternity.

Erdely faced the most counts of defamation, and the jury found all of the statements actionable, but did not find the “rape school” statement was published with actual malice.

The jury also believed that in post-publication interviews on the “Brian Lehrer Show” and Slate in November 2014, Erdely made statements with actual malice about Eramo, as well as in an e-mail to the Washington Post November 30, 2014.

Rolling Stone and Wenner Media were found to have acted with actual malice when the magazine republished the story December 5, 2014, with an editor’s note saying that it no longer found Jackie credible, although the jury did not believe the original November 19, 2014, story was published with actual malice.

After the verdict, Rolling Stone issued a statement and apology to Eramo.

“For almost 50 years, Rolling Stone has aimed to produce journalism with the highest reporting and ethical standards, and with a strong humanistic point of view,” it said. “In our desire to present this complicated issue from the perspective of a survivor, we overlooked reporting paths and made journalistic mistakes that we are committed to never making again. We deeply regret these missteps and sincerely apologize to anyone hurt by them, including Ms. Eramo.”

Legal expert David Heilberg, who is not connected to the case, says, “Obviously the jury thought it was more than pure negligence.”

He compares it to walking toward a goal. “The difference between negligence and actual malice is with negligence, you’re walking toward a goal and ignoring everything else. With actual malice, you’re walking toward a goal with blinders on and you’re not using your peripheral vision.”

Heilberg also says, “I find it interesting that in exactly the time where we’ve set new lows in our political discourse, the jury could find actual malice.”

The jury adjourned for the day and will return Monday for the damages portion of the trial, in which it hears testimony about how the article affected Eramo and awards some or all of her $7.5 million claim.

Categories
News

Jury deliberates for third day in Rolling Stone trial

The waiting game continues Friday for Nicole Eramo, Sabrina Erdely and Rolling Stone deputy managing editor Sean Woods, along with their lawyers, support staff and the media as Day 16 in Eramo’s defamation lawsuit trial against the magazine begins and the jury deliberates for a third day.

The jury will decide whether Rolling Stone acted with actual malice when it published the now-retracted “A Rape on Campus” November 19, 2014. The story recounted first-year Jackie’s lurid tale of a gang rape at Phi Kappa Psi, which wreaked havoc on grounds at UVA before her account fell apart within a few weeks. A later Charlottesville Police investigation could find no evidence of the assault.

Eramo’s $7.5 million complaint says she was unfairly depicted as an indifferent administrator who tried to steer sexual assault victims from reporting to police to keep rape statistics low, because, “Nobody wants to send their daughter to the rape school,” a statement in the article she says she never made.

The case drew national attention, and even now reporters from the Washington Post, New York Times, CNN and ABC are waiting for a decision.

“The only thing predictable about a jury is its unpredictability,” says legal expert David Heilberg, who is not connected to the case.

And if the jury rules in favor of Eramo, the trial will continue with a damages phase, which her attorney Libby Locke has estimated could take another half day of testimony. That will send the jury back to determine how much to award.