Subject: Discussion List for campus-based and allied personnel working to end gender-based violence on campus.
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- From: "Nord, Amy" <>
- To: "" <>
- Subject: When do SA victims enter your adjudication process?
- Date: Thu, 4 Nov 2010 14:38:15 +0000
- Accept-language: en-US
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Colleagues, I apologize if you may have gotten this on the ASCA list-serve. I am trying to me an information-gather machine today. ;-) I am struggling with a protocol issue when a SA occurs in a residence hall, and the student reports to hall staff immediately. However, SAs are heard by the DOS, and the student, having made a report with res life staff, did not want to
report again to DOS right away. I want to suggest a best practice or offer a protocol so, I was wondering if you have some thoughts to help guide me. My questions are: Do you think that if a victim reports to the RA that report could be considered a formal report? Residents are told to report problems to their RA, an authority figure. At what point does all of this become official? I think a victim may
assume,by reporting to the RA and Hall Director that they have made a formal report. I think the victim, by telling the RA and especially the Hall Director, would assume the university is involved at that point. Why does the victim have to keep meeting with
additional people (DOS) if they have already told an authority figure in order to get the ball rolling i.e the offender moved to another hall during the investigation?
Just to get to this point (two weeks), she has met with her RA, HD, Counselor, me, health services, DOS, police officer, police investigator. What is a FORMAL complaint? Who makes it formal? Thank You, Amy Amy Nord, M.S.Ed Campus Violence Prevention Project Coordinator University of Wisconsin-Stout 410 Bowman Hall Counseling Center 715.232.2468
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- When do SA victims enter your adjudication process?, Nord, Amy, 11/04/2010
- Re: When do SA victims enter your adjudication process?, Michelle N. Issadore, 11/04/2010
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