HIGHER EDUCATION BUBBLE UPDATE: Texas Tech Dean of Students: Due Process has a “Chilling Effect” on Justice at College.
Amy Murphy, the dean of students at Texas Tech, believes that giving students of her college the rights that they have access to has a “chilling effect” on people’s ability to accuse others of assault.
Murphy told Texas Tech’s college paper that, as a part of the Student Code of Conduct, students at the university do not have the right to confront their accuser. More than that, they cannot have a representative ask questions of the accuser at all, and cross-examination is simply not allowed.
According to Murphy, this process is a “learning experience” that “will be conducted in the least adversarial way possible.”
During Texas Tech hearings about alleged crimes, “students are not able to cross-examine witnesses, nor are the students’ advisers.”
“If cross-examination were to be allowed,” Murphy told the paper, “it would create a chilling effect for future possible reports.”
“We already have the information,” she explained.
Amy, you’re coming across kinda creepy here.