Fraternity And Sorority Political Action Committee Calls Out Rolling Stone, Asks For Fraternities To Be Reinstated At UVA
When Rolling Stone decided to publish its article, “A Rape on Campus: A Brutal Assault and Struggle for Justice at UVA,” they set off a serious chain of events that damaged the reputations of not only Greek members at UVA, but also of those across the nation. Phi Psi had its house vandalized and UVA suspended all Greek life until January.
As of last week, many people began digging into the story, vocalizing that it seemed a little out there. Due to the surfacing evidence against the article, Rolling Stone issued an apology.
The Fraternity and Sorority Political Action Committee released a statement sharing its thoughts on the matter and took a few digs at Rolling Stone in the process:
The Fraternity and Sorority Political Action Committee (FSPAC), the National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) and the North-American Interfraternity Conference (NIC) believes recent events show the need for a comprehensive reevaluation of many issues related to students and sexual assault on campus. We are saddened at the lack of journalistic integrity Rolling Stone demonstrated in publishing its article on campus rape at the University of Virginia. The reporter and magazine’s reckless actions have many negative impacts on higher education that cannot be fixed with a simple apology.
First and foremost, this article sets back the fight against rape and sexual assault, marginalizing and discouraging true victims from stepping forward. Fraternities and sororities will continue to educate students about how to intervene and prevent sexual assault, and how to support all victims of campus sexual violence. We believe anyone who has committed sexual assault should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. We will not allow the Rolling Stone article to undermine our intent to be leaders in solving the problem of sexual assault.
Second, the reckless Rolling Stone article set off a chain of events that led the University of Virginia to suspend operations of all fraternities and sororities for the remainder of the school term. This decision was made before an investigation into all of the facts alleged in the story was completed and it was not consistent with the law or university policies. The school’s decision to suspend hurt the reputation of thousands of outstanding student leaders in our organizations who had nothing to do with the alleged events described in the article. As a result, the University’s rush to judgment has caused great harm and emotional distress to the members of Phi Kappa Psi and many in the fraternal community. We believe universities must demonstrate more respect for the fundamental rights to due process and freedom of association for students and student organizations when allegations of misconduct are lodged. A rush to judgment on campus all too often turns out to be wrong, especially when applied at the organizational level.
Third, we call on Congress and state legislatures to look seriously at the complex issue of how to handle sexual assault on campus. We believe any crime that involves bodily harm – which automatically encompasses any sexual assault – should be handled primarily in the criminal justice system, regardless of the accused’s status as a student. Congress should examine whether the public interest is being served by forcing sexual assault cases into a campus judicial process. We believe campus processes lack the necessary skill sets, resources and capability needed to reach the right decision and many who work with these issues contend campus conduct bodies will always lack this expertise despite the best of intentions of those who work with Title IX and sexual violence on campuses.
Finally, we call on the University of Virginia to immediately reinstate operations for all fraternity and sorority organizations on campus, to issue an apology for its actions of the last two weeks, to publicly explain and release all records for the basis of its decision to suspend our organizations, and outline what steps it will take to restore the reputation of our groups and students at UVA.
I couldn’t have said it any better myself..
[via FSPAC]
Image via Twitter
Hopefully we can get back to believing that a man is “Innocent until proven guilty”.
11 years ago at 5:24 pmIn my experience, geeds tend to assume that Greeks are almost always guilty until proven innocent. And we’re the elitist pigs?!
11 years ago at 8:01 pmYou aren’t exactly helping the Greek’s case, sonny boy.
11 years ago at 8:14 pmSJW’s are now openly saying that they don’t think presumption of innocence should apply in rape cases. I’ve actually heard feminists argue that for criminal rape trials, the burden of proof standard should be lowered from “beyond a reasonable doubt” (standard in all criminal trials) to “preponderance of evidence” (standard in civil trials) in order to obtain easier convictions of accused rapists. They seriously believe this should be adopted in our legal system. Luckily we have a constitution that prevents such insane people from getting their way.
11 years ago at 2:39 pmThis social justice warrior bullshit ends now. Kudos to UVA Greek life for taking the fight back to the school and Rolling Stone, as both need to answer for their injustices, just as they expected Phi Psi and the rest of the Greek community to answer to a false allegation.
11 years ago at 5:28 pmLET’S BURN ROLLING STONE DOWN. Wait, I’m not an intellectually limited, useless, bigoted liberal that isn’t a WASP or European-descent Catholic.
11 years ago at 9:39 pmIt’s times like these, when the liberal media attacks our Greek system, that no matter what letters you represent we must stick together and fight back to defend ourselves.
11 years ago at 7:22 amFuck the media with their “judge, jury, and executioner” bullshit. We have a court system for a reason, douchebag journalists and liberals have no room smearing those who haven’t been given a trial. Pulling for these guys and UVA.
11 years ago at 5:35 pmHopefully the university can admit to their wrongdoings rather than trying to cover their own ass
11 years ago at 5:52 pmNo sexual assault acts of any kind should be condoned however, Greek life and UVA itself are not being treated fairly by all the idiots attacking the university when nothing has even been clarified and people are purely trying to throw in their own opinions
11 years ago at 5:58 pmWhy doesn’t the national fraternity or the university for that matter sue for Libel?
11 years ago at 6:15 pmNever mind my comment. I just read the Washington Post article about it. It appears that because of the of the fact names were not explicitly mentioned, the brothers themselves cannot sue for libel. The national organization as a whole is too big to sue for libel in most states. The University has no interest in a libel case. Also it would be unwise for the individuals to sue because as of now their names aren’t attached to the case. However if they sue then a simple google search can potentially ruin their lives in the future. It’s fucking bullshit Rolling Stone is going to get away with this.
11 years ago at 6:32 pmI feel like nationals should have a case though seeing how their name was used. What is this Washington Post article?
11 years ago at 7:30 pmA good lawyer could sue and protect the names of the members. The Post article is suggesting Phi Psi plays it safe and lets it blow over and people will forget. If Phi Psi wants a new house, they can and should sue. At the very least, they could hire a lawncare business for the next 20 years because the pledges obviously aren’t taking very good care of that lawn. Also they don’t have pledges.
11 years ago at 7:37 pmI was reading several Post articles related to this topic, but didn’t see the one regarding possible legal action. Can anyone post the link?
11 years ago at 7:19 amGiving em fucking hell
11 years ago at 6:38 pmIf you read the original Rolling Stone article the story wasn’t even believable to begin with. I probably should just bash my head on the sidewalk a couple times to cause some brain damage so I can fit in, because slowly realizing how fucking stupid the majority of people are is depressing.
(P.S. If you see a guy rioting in Sperry’s on the Ferguson news later on, the sidewalk plan worked.)
11 years ago at 6:46 pmI knew it was bullshit when I got to the “Don’t you want to be a brother? We all had to do it, you do to”. That shit is straight out of a Lifetime movie. Finding a fraternity that actually uses gang rape as some kind of initiation rite is the “holy grail” of insane feminists looking to shut down the entire Greek system. Of course frats don’t actually do that, so Jackie/Erdley made up this part because it shoehorns the story neatly into the most extreme, nightmarish, horrifying caricature of fraternity men that SJW’s have tried for years to foist upon the general public.
Unfortunately for them, when concocting this lie they failed to realize that UVA does not have fall pledging. Therefore the gang rape was not part of a pledge initiation rite, because there were no pledges present, because there were no pledges PERIOD because this incident happened in September which is six months before pledging even begins at UVA. In their zeal to fabricate the “perfect” rape story, they neglected to cover their tracks with even the most basic research, and now they’re busted.
Oops.
11 years ago at 2:48 pmCan’t wait to see what UVA will come up with as a response to this.
11 years ago at 6:49 pmGlad to see the FSPAC, NPC, and NIC coming out swinging.
11 years ago at 7:20 pm