• EXCLUSIVE: McAuliffe-Linked Law Firm Fighting Virginia Student Who Said

    From Ubiquitous@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 28 04:41:54 2021
    XPost: alt.tv.pol-incorrect, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.usa
    XPost: va.politics

    A law firm that employed Virginia gubernatorial candidate Terry
    McAuliffe is being paid handsomely to fight victims of alleged sexual
    abuse in schools, on behalf of a school system that the girls say
    failed to protect them.

    In one case the Hunton Andrews Kurth law firm, where McAuliffe served
    as a senior adviser from 2019 until recently, is battling a young woman
    who says that she was repeatedly raped on her Fairfax County middle
    school campus as a 12-year old and that she was slashed with a knife,
    burned with a lighter, anally penetrated, and gang raped.

    The law firm and McAuliffe’s campaign did not return request for
    comment, but McAuliffe reported income apparently linked to the firm in
    2021, after announcing his run for governor of Virginia on December 8,
    2020. Later advertisements from the firm for McAuliffe fundraisers
    refer to him as a “former colleague.”

    The girl in the middle school case said she was afraid of having her
    real name attached because one of her alleged tormentors had threatened
    to kill her if she came forward. The law firm is seeking to have the
    lawsuit thrown out because it was filed under a pseudonym, even though
    there is no dispute that the school system knows who she is. A judge
    rejected Hunton’s argument, but it filed an appeal on behalf of its
    client, the Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS).

    In a separate case, a girl alleged that after FCPS administrators were
    told of an unwanted sexual incident on a band trip, a school security
    officer told her there was no point in seeking criminal charges, and
    the school gave an award to her alleged abuser. Hunton told the court
    that the school system lost documentation showing its investigation of
    the allegations – which occurred in part because it was not using a
    sexual harassment allegation database that it had promised to use
    pursuant to a federal settlement in the other girl’s case. In both
    cases, a women’s rights group filed “amicus” briefs to express
    opposition to Hunton’s arguments.

    Joining McAuliffe’s former law firm and FCPS in the latter case was the National School Boards Association, which filed its own amicus brief.
    The trio is banking on an aggressive interpretation of Title IX, a law
    that provides protections in sexual assault cases, that would be more
    favorable to school administrators and less favorable to victims. The
    Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals smacked down their logic, but Hunton
    has signaled its intent to take the case to the Supreme Court. A win
    there would mean the same interpretation would apply to schools across
    the country.

    The Daily Wire’s review of Hunton’s work brings into stark relief
    themes that have come to define the race for Virginia governor.
    McAuliffe’s statement that parents’ role in schools should be limited;
    the National School Board Association’s implication that parents angry
    at school policies could be akin to “domestic terrorists;” and the
    financial ties between the McAuliffe-linked law firm, his campaign,
    school systems, and teachers unions.

    The cases tie thematically and legally to an earlier exclusive Daily
    Wire report about a sexual assault case in Loudoun County. Loudoun
    County Public Schools blamed its actions in that case on Title IX,
    saying it would lobby for changes to make it more favorable to victims.
    Yet the records show that the NSBA, the Virginia School Board
    Association, and the former law firm of the state’s possible governor
    are actively seeking the opposite.

    The review also highlighted the often divergent interests of parents
    and the school system bureaucrats funded by their tax dollars.

    ***

    On September 21, a 22-year old woman sat by her lawyer as a judge got
    unusually snippy at the opposing counsel. The lawyer from Hunton seemed
    to be implying, at times, that the woman might not exist.

    The woman had come forward to say that she had been repeatedly raped in
    a Fairfax middle school when she was 12. She’d been saying so since the
    time, back in 2012. She’d told school administrators, who she said
    ignored her. She’d filed a complaint with a federal civil rights body,
    which ordered FCPS to make changes as a result, some of which FCPS
    failed to do. When she became an adult, just before the statute of
    limitations ran out, she sued her alleged rapist, the school system,
    and several school officials.

    The story she tells is shocking and horrifying. One reason it went
    unnoticed: the efforts of the Hunton law firm. Considering her
    assailant had allegedly threatened to kill her if she came forward, and
    given the highly personal nature of the allegations, she filed the case pseudonymously. Though it’s not uncommon for lawsuits to be filed by a
    “Jane Doe,” Hunton sought to have the case thrown out because the
    plaintiff did not first ask permission. The judge didn’t buy Hunton’s
    argument and ordered the case to head towards trial. But Hunton and
    FCPS were relentless. They appealed.

    On that day last month, Hunton argued again and again to the Fourth
    Circuit of Appeals that the case should be thrown out for filing with a pseudonym without getting permission first. A judge made clear that he
    did not agree with Hunton’s argument. FCPS knew well who the woman knew
    in court filings by her initials, B.R., was.

    It had known for ten years.

    She was a real person, with real scars. And she was sitting right there
    in the room.

    In one invoice from March alone, Hunton billed FCPS $47,628.16 for its
    work attempting to keep B.R.’s case from reaching a jury, accounting
    for nearly a third of its total bill that period.

    ***

    Hunton’s work for FCPS frequently took the form of fighting parents who
    alleged problems, and it had a reputation for doing so aggressively.
    If the power of a school bureaucracy were personified, it might take
    the form of Hunton Andrews Kurth, a law firm that has represented
    school districts in these types of situations ever since its
    predecessor firm, Hunton & Williams, fought to preserve school
    segregation in a case that – grouped with several others on appeal –
    became the 1954 landmark Supreme Court decision Brown v. Board.

    In recent years, the nation’s tenth-largest school district, Fairfax
    County Public School, has paid Hunton more money than it has paid
    almost any other company. Hunton’s work for FCPS frequently took the
    form of fighting parents who alleged problems, and it had a reputation
    for doing so aggressively. Last month, it filed a lawsuit against the
    mother of a special-needs student for possessing records that the
    school district provided her under the Freedom of Information Act. The
    records included Hunton’s billing invoices; FCPS says it mistakenly
    forgot to redact as much information as it meant to, and it is holding
    the mom responsible for its mistake.

    Its lawyers on school issues included attorneys like Reiko Koyama,
    whose career highlights include “Defend[ing] a major alcoholic beverage producer in a consumer class action alleging claims of false and
    misleading advertising.”

    Hunton has close ties to the Virginia government. The running point for Hunton’s FCPS work was Stuart Raphael. In 2014, when McAuliffe began
    his first term in the governor’s mansion, Raphael was tapped as the
    state’s solicitor general. In 2017, as McAuliffe’s term came to a
    close, his lieutenant governor Ralph Northam replaced him in the
    governor’s mansion; Raphael returned to Hunton, and McAuliffe soon
    joined him there.

    From 2014 to 2018, the Fairfax school system paid Hunton some half a
    million dollars a year. In October 2019, it appointed McAuliffe – who
    is not a lawyer – as a senior advisor for cybersecurity. FCPS’s
    payments to Hunton ballooned to about $4.4 million in calendar year
    2019, $2.5 million in 2020, and $3 million so far in 2021.

    In October 2020, FCPS data was held for ransom by foreign hackers, and
    Hunton was paid at least $250,000 to handle the situation.

    In August 2021, Virginia Democrats sought to wrest control of the
    courts from conservatives by packing the court, and Raphael was
    appointed to one of the new judgeships. As Raphael returned to
    government, McAuliffe sought his own return: Virginia’s constitution
    bars governors from successive terms in office, but nothing prevented a
    former governor from resuming his post after a spin through the so-
    called revolving door.

    McAuliffe reported receiving more than $250,000 in 2021 for
    “cybersecurity/law” on an ethics form marked as covering the period of
    2021, though it is not possible to know how much because that is the
    maximum dollar range broken out on campaign ethics forms. When he
    announced his new bid for governor, Hunton contributed $16,000 to his
    campaign.

    Among his campaign’s largest funders are teachers’ unions: the two
    national teachers’ unions donated nearly a million dollars combined. As
    The Daily Wire reported previously, McAuliffe promised to minimize the
    role parents would play in schools, infamously barking in a debate: “I
    don’t think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.”
    His embrace of teachers union priorities, including coronavirus
    restrictions, pitted him against parents who juggled both work and
    watching their children as Virginia districts kept schools closed for
    longer than almost any other state.

    But if teachers union cash flowed to McAuliffe’s campaign based on the
    prospect that, once in control of the purse strings of government, the
    favor would be returned many times over, a similar dynamic was at play
    with FCPS and Hunton. FCPS shoveled enormous quantities of taxpayer
    cash to Hunton. But if Hunton did its job, the district and its
    administrators would not face liability in cases when lawsuits alleged
    that problems had occurred, then been swept under the rug.

    Problems like B.R. being abused.

    ***

    “A 12-year old was repeatedly sexually assaulted and egregiously
    betrayed by an institution all kids have drilled into them that they’re supposed to trust almost like a god.”
    “A 12-year old was repeatedly sexually assaulted and egregiously
    betrayed by an institution all kids have drilled into them that they’re supposed to trust almost like a god. She was violated by the
    perpetrators but also by the administrators who did nothing,” Monica
    Beck, a longtime Title IX attorney with the Fierberg National Law Group
    who is representing B.R., told The Daily Wire.

    B.R. filed her lawsuit in 2019 based on conduct she says occurred from
    late 2011 to early 2012. The complaint says that she was “raped,
    sexually assaulted, sexually harassed, terrorized, extorted, bullied,
    and threatened with death by other students at Rachel Carson Middle
    School.”

    It says she made “specific and repeated complaints to FCPS
    administrators” and “begged them for help” but “they did nothing.”

    For example, the complaint says that on November 21, 2011, B.R. and her
    mother met with assistant principals and a guidance counselor, taking
    with them a sexually explicit voicemail from the student, and saying
    that she “feared for her safety.” The assistant principal said the
    suspect “had been in enough trouble” and asked B.R. and her mother not
    to “ruin a kid’s life,” according to the lawsuit.

    The administrators said they would move B.R.’s locker away from her
    victimizers – but did not actually take even that modest measure, the
    complaint said.

    “As a result of FCPS’s half-hearted investigation into Jane Doe’s
    reports of sexual harassment and bullying at RCMS, FCPS emboldened Jane
    Doe’s peers to retaliate against her for ‘snitching’ … As FCPS students
    grew more confident in their ability to assault Jane Doe and escape the consequences, they became more overt with their advances,” B.R.’s
    complaint says. “Beginning in December 2011 and continuing through
    February 2012, [a peer, who she named] and other students raped Jane
    Doe on RCMS campus during and after school hours.”

    Hunton did not provide a comment for this story. A spokesperson for
    FCPS said, “FCPS does not comment on active litigation.” Lawyers for
    two fellow students who are named in B.R.’s complaint did not return a
    request for comment; Michael E. Kinney, who represents school employees
    who are named individually in the lawsuit, declined to comment except
    to note that the students and staff members have denied the allegations
    in court filings.

    “On January 27, 2012, Jane Doe emailed [the school’s principal] and
    recounted the ‘sexual harassment, physical harassment, and name
    calling’ she endured” at the middle school, the lawsuit says. An
    administrator told her in February 2012 that the school system would investigate.

    On March 1, 2012, the 12-year-old confided in her parents that the
    abuse was worse than she had initially let on: that she had been raped.
    B.R.’s “parents filed a police report on March 2, 2012. [A detective,
    who she named], a former FCPS employee, interviewed Jane Doe on March
    5, 2012. Jane Doe underwent a SANE (Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner)
    evaluation on March 5, 2012. The evaluation revealed contusions inside
    Jane Doe’s anus which ultimately corroborated her report of anal
    penetration. [The detective] met with [the school’s principal] on March
    6, 2012 to discuss Doe’s rape. FCPS permitted Jane Doe’s rapist to
    remain on campus but took no steps to facilitate Jane Doe’s return to a
    safe and supportive school environment,” the complaint says.

    The alleged rapist was not criminally charged, Beck said. B.R. stayed
    home from school. School officials “directed that [B.R.’s] homebound instructors use ‘code names’ in emails regarding Jane Doe so as not to
    be subject to discovery in a lawsuit and to avoid public disclosure requirements,” the suit says.

    The lawsuit says that at the time, she submitted a complaint to the
    federal Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights (OCR)
    “advising of additional instances of rape, anal rape, and physical
    assault with weapons she endured, as well as death threats directed to
    her.”

    A letter from OCR, which has been on the agency’s website for years,
    says “OCR’s initial investigation found that [FCPS] did immediately
    conduct an inquiry into most allegations of sexual harassment brought
    by the Student and her parent. However, OCR identified some possible
    concerns with the adequacy of the Division’s investigation.”

    “OCR has further concerns that the Division does not have a system to
    track reports of sexual harassment to determine whether there may be a
    hostile environment at a particular school, whether individual schools
    are responding in a prompt and appropriate manner to reports of sexual harassment, whether the Division’s efforts to educate students
    regarding sexual harassment are effective, or whether school-based investigations of reports of sexual harassment are prompt and
    equitable.”

    On November 11, 2014, FCPS entered into a Voluntary Resolution
    Agreement with the federal government that required the school system
    to take certain steps. B.R. says they never took them.

    One required FCPS to create and use “a centralized database in the
    Division in which documentation of Division investigations and outcomes
    of sexual and gender-based harassment allegations are compiled and
    maintained.”

    Another case involving FCPS and aggressively fought by Hunton was ruled
    on by an appeals court in June 2021, and it was made clear that the
    school district did not do this.

    ***

    The National School Board Association’s position was that it should be
    up to “trained school officials,” not the second-guessing of a
    “reasonable person.”
    That case involves an Oakton High School student known as Jane Doe, who
    alleges that she was subject to non-consensual sexual activity by an
    older boy on a school bus during a band trip in 2018. There are
    conflicting accounts about what actually happened that day, and even if
    it happened as the complaint alleges, the incident is less shocking. At
    issue, rather, is how administrators reacted when they heard about it.
    And its true significance is the way Hunton is arguing in court to
    adopt a legal definition that could shield school administrators from
    liability in a vast array of situations.

    The complaint alleges that after the incident, a school security
    officer told Doe to pen a written statement; she wrote that she had
    been subjected to sexual activity despite initial physical resistance.
    The security guard asked if her parents planned to take legal action,
    and “told Doe that if she went to court she would lose, it would be a
    waste of money, and ‘the most that could happen to [Assailant] is being
    charged with battery,'” her lawsuit says. (The school denied this, and
    many of Doe’s claims, in legal filings, and said Jane had “rage” when
    she found out the student had a girlfriend.)

    “The school did not notify Doe’s parents that their daughter had
    written and signed a statement about what happened on the band trip
    until several days later,” the lawsuit added. When the parents met with
    the principal and her mother told the principal her daughter had been
    sexually assaulted, the “school seemed concerned only about the
    school’s potential exposure to liability, not the safety of its
    students,” per the filing.

    Emails showed administrators joking about the incident, making
    references to the number of “inches” of the alleged assailant’s penis
    and to the American Pie quote, “one time at band camp.”

    A staff member who was aware of the alleged assault later gave the
    “[a]ssailant an award reserved for the band member with exceptional
    skill and personal leadership,” the complaint says.

    After the suit was filed, FCPS erased the contents of its security
    computer and told the court that as a result, it did not have
    statements it gathered about the incident, which would have had to be
    provided in discovery, Doe’s attorneys said. The evidence should have
    also been in a second system: the sexual harassment complaint database
    that FCPS was obligated to create and maintain under the B.R. federal settlement. It turned out that many schools simply weren’t using the
    database at all.

    A jury found that Jane Doe had been sexually harassed but that school administrators were not responsible for it. But the case went to appeal
    based on a dispute over the meaning of legal terms that trigger
    requirements under Title IX: administrators’ “actual knowledge” or
    “actual notice” of an incident.

    Hunton seemed to argue that administrators don’t have a duty under
    Title IX unless they subjectively knew an incident occurred, not that
    they were objectively told of one. “There was a discrepancy in their
    stories about whether Jane initially pulled her hand away from Jack’s
    penis: she said she did, he said she didn’t. [The principal] didn’t
    know which was true,” Hunton argued.

    It said the precedent set in an earlier case called Baynard would
    “require proof that [the principal] had actual knowledge, subjectively measured, that Jane was sexually harassed.” In other words, though the principal may have been told that an incident of sexual harassment
    occurred, she had to understand it that way before Title IX kicked in.

    Baynard is a case in which a principal was repeatedly told that a
    teacher was a child molester, then a librarian told a principal she saw
    a child (Baynard) sitting on his lap, but the principal “naïvely
    believed [the teacher]’s assurance that he was only having an ‘innocent father-son chat.’” The principal was therefore not liable because she
    did not believe he was molesting a child even if she should have. Under
    that precedent, school officials’ “subjective” judgment, not what they
    are actually told, is key, Hunton argued.

    B.R.’s attorney Monica Beck – who was not involved in Jane Doe’s case
    but is familiar with it because of the overlap with her own case – said
    that interpretation was a catch-22 that would have a dramatic impact on
    other cases. “In essence, a school administrator would actually have to
    witness a rape or have it recorded on video to have it be a real Title
    IX complaint,” she told The Daily Wire. “’We didn’t have ‘actual
    knowledge’ [and therefore have to investigate and take other steps
    according to Title IX rules] because we didn’t actually know a rape
    occurred?’ If you don’t investigate, how are you ever going to know for
    sure that it happened?”

    Apparently recognizing the way that such a definition, if endorsed by a
    high court, would shield school officials who allegedly failed to act
    to protect children across the country, the National School Board
    Association, as well as the Virginia School Board Association, filed
    amicus briefs supporting Hunton’s position. The National School Board Association’s position was that it should be up to “trained school
    officials,” not the second-guessing of a “reasonable person,” whether
    they had awareness of an incident.

    “Title IX neither requires nor permits this Court to substitute its
    views, or the views of a ‘reasonable person,’ for that of trained
    school officials. Affirming a subjective ‘actual knowledge’ standard is
    both necessary and appropriate to protect those officials’ judgment,”
    the NBSA wrote.

    Twenty-four women’s and human rights groups sided with Doe, filing or
    joining amicus briefs opposing Hunton’s proposed definition.

    https://dw-wp-production.imgix.net/2021/10/parties.png

    On one side in court was a progressive, nonprofit law firm called
    Public Justice that represents Doe and works to “combat social and
    economic injustice, protect the Earth’s sustainability, and challenge
    predatory corporate conduct and government abuses.” (The firm did not
    return a request for comment.) On the other side was Hunton. In June,
    the Fourth Circuit of Appeals smacked down Hunton’s logic.

    “If these facts do not show that the School Board had actual notice,
    we don’t know what would,” it wrote. “The record brims with unrebutted
    evidence demonstrating that the School Board, through appropriate
    officials, received multiple reports that objectively provided notice
    of an allegation,” the appellate court wrote.

    Hunton’s “reliance on Baynard is misplaced for two reasons… Moreover, regardless of what we held in Baynard, our subsequent en banc decision
    in Jennings is the controlling law,” it wrote.

    But Hunton would not relent. It has signaled that it plans to take the
    case to the Supreme Court, where if successful, it would dramatically
    loosen Title IX protections for school children across the country
    while protecting administrators who failed to act.

    ***

    After an alleged school bathroom rape in Loudoun County — Fairfax’s
    immediate neighbor to the west — and denials by school system officials
    that it had occurred, Loudoun County Public Schools this month blamed
    Title IX.

    Loudoun superintendent Scott Zeigler said that “Throughout these recent
    events, the Loudoun County Public Schools complied with our obligations
    under Title IX. However, we have found the process outlined under Title
    IX by the U.S. Department of Education to be insufficient in addressing
    issues at the K-12 level. We believe the process could be strengthened
    with some reforms. I am recommending to the Loudoun County School Board
    that this issue is placed on our legislative agenda and that the board
    and its allied groups actively lobby for changes to allow more
    protections to victims of sexual harassment and sexual assault.”

    But the court filings show that the National School Boards Association,
    FCPS, and the former law firm of the Democratic gubernatorial candidate
    are actually seeking the reverse.

    The response illustrates one final, disturbing element in the complex
    web between Democrat politicians, lawyers, government employees, and
    teachers unions: the way partisanship among school employees may have contributed to failures to investigate sexual assaults in recent years.

    During the Donald Trump presidency, left-leaning media ran articles
    painting his education secretary, Betsy DeVos, as making changes to
    Title IX, particularly at colleges, in a way that adds protections for
    the accused. News outlets like HuffPost were rife with headlines like
    “Betsy DeVos’s Campaign To Roll Back Sexual Assault Survivor Rights Is Complete.”

    The longtime Title IX women’s-rights attorney Beck said that soon
    after, she noticed K-12 school systems pulling back on taking action in
    sexual assault cases.

    But this may have been more because the educational establishment’s
    partisan leanings primed it to believe that a president they disliked
    would actually block them from protecting victims and punishing
    assailants.

    Unsurprisingly, Beck said that the federal government did not actually
    stop K-12 schools from taking action against rapists.

    The changes under DeVos were thousands of pages long, most of them
    simply codifying best practices. Some involved how college campuses
    deal with rapes, but at the K-12 level, DeVos’ changes made it easier
    for schools to handle alleged sexual assault.

    “Some of the DeVos changes address how much training should
    administrators have, how much should the people investigating have?
    There were some really good takeaways in those changes,” Beck said.
    Previously “in K-12 in order for a school to be on notice that a
    student had been sexually assaulted, the child had to tell a principal
    or assistant principal. If they told a teacher it didn’t count. DeVos
    changed it because a child trusts and knows his teacher, and doesn’t
    know who the Title IX coordinator is.”

    “Somehow a lot of schools are interpreting this as prohibiting them
    from taking any actions against perpetrators whatsoever… the way
    schools are interpreting it, I’ve seen them interpreting it in ways
    that aren’t supported.”

    LCPS has implied that the reason it moved the alleged May 28 rapist to
    a different school — where he was arrested for a different classroom
    assault on October 6 — was because Title IX required it to do its own investigation which it could not do until after the police had
    completed their work. But the federal government has long been clear
    that schools do not need to wait until a criminal case is closed to
    conduct their own investigation.

    In the federal agreement in B.R.’s case, the Department of Education
    reminded FCPS that “Although a school division may need to delay
    temporarily the fact-finding portion of a Title IX investigation while
    the police are gathering evidence, once notified that the police
    department has completed its gathering of evidence (not the ultimate
    outcome of the investigation or the filing of any charges), the school
    division must promptly resume and complete its fact-finding for the
    Title IX investigation.”

    In the case of the May 28 rape, a rape kit was administered the same
    day, and the suspect was arrested in July, well before he started the
    next school year at a new school.

    Title IX under DeVos also requires that a school is “obligated to
    conclude a grievance process within a reasonably prompt time frame.”

    LCPS did not return a request for comment on how Title IX was to blame
    for its handling of the assault, and what changes it intended to lobby
    for.

    ***

    “How about they put that money towards real training and compensating
    the victims they failed instead of paying a law firm millions of
    dollars?”
    As for B.R., she is just hoping to heal.

    “As much as the school system tries to deny her a day in court… If you
    knew the family they were fighting against it would sicken you,” a
    family friend and parent of a classmate who has known B.R. since she
    was six told The Daily Wire.

    “Her parents were very involved and came from an intact family,” the
    parent — speaking anonymously to help shield B.R.’s identity — said.
    The school system basically gave her a choice: “continue being raped or
    don’t go to school,” the parent said.

    “This weight has sat on us for years as a community,” the parent said.

    Beck, B.R.’s attorney, said Hunton’s strategies are unusually
    cutthroat. “We’re dealing with a very aggressive school district here
    that makes it very hard for students who are seeking justice,” she
    said.

    “How about they put that money towards real training and compensating
    the victims they failed instead of paying a law firm millions of
    dollars?”

    --
    Let's go Brandon!

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