Subject: Discussion List for campus-based and allied personnel working to end gender-based violence on campus.
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- From: Brett Sokolow <>
- To: "Shaffer, Jyl (shaffej2)" <>, "Torres-Zickler, Alina M." <>, "" <>
- Subject: Re: Experience with No Contact Directives and Sanctions
- Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2016 15:04:59 +0000
- Accept-language: en-US
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OCR has stated that no contact orders are to protect the victim and should not be issued mutually on an automatic basis. If they are issued mutually, they should be tailored (skewed restrictions) so as to reduce the potential for violation by the victim.
Regards, Brett A. Sokolow Brett A. Sokolow, Esq.
President & CEO, The NCHERM Group LLC Founder & Board Chair, The National Behavioral Intervention Team Association Executive Director, The Association of Title IX Administrators Publisher, Student Affairs eNews
*PLEASE NOTE NEW MAILING ADDRESS* 1109 Lancaster Avenue Berwyn, PA 19312 Tel. (610) 993-0229 The NCHERM Group, LLC serves as legal counsel/advisor to 75 campuses This e-mail message is from a law firm and may contain information that is privileged or confidential. It is not intended for transmission to, or receipt by, any unauthorized persons. If you have received this electronic mail transmission in error, do not read it. Please delete it from your system without copying it, and notify the sender by reply e-mail at or by calling 610.993.0229, so that our address record can be corrected.
From: "Shaffer, Jyl (shaffej2)" <>
Date: Friday, February 5, 2016 at 9:57 AM To: "Torres-Zickler, Alina M." <>, "" <> Subject: RE: Experience with No Contact Directives and Sanctions Alina, Typically I do not issue mutual no contact orders until I’ve spoken with the alleged victim first. Just like civil protective orders, campus-based
mutual no contact orders can increase the lethality of the situation, create a chilling effect for reporting/moving forward in the process, etc. I can’t say there’s not a circumstance where I wouldn’t issue one without talking to the alleged victim first,
but in 5 years I haven’t done that once. Also, we recognize that sometimes violations happen. We take notices of violations on a case-by-case basis and, if there wasn’t a threat/act
of violence and if neither party says they were harmed by the violation, we will often issue a warning. We do tell them, though, that they only get one warning. If I have an alleged victim who is violating the order, that’s an important moment to find out
if what they want the University to do has changed, if there is pressure on them, etc.
Also, suspension may be an unreasonable sanction for some kinds of violations, particularly since much of the violations I see happen electronically,
so suspension will likely just give the person more time to make contact. Hope that helps, Jyl Shaffer Title IX Coordinator University of Cincinnati Office: (513) 556-3349 Edwards I Suite 3115 45 Corry Blvd Cincinnati OH 45221 Pronouns: she, her, hers From: Torres-Zickler, Alina M. []
Hello all – No Contact Directives are often requested by complainants on our campus and we use them frequently without much issue (they are applied to no contact from either the accused or the complainant). Recently we have seen patterns
with complainants of dating violence ( as well as other types of sexual misconduct) that because of the complicated nature of the relationship the complainant will send an email or a text message after the No Contact Directive is in place.
There are those on my campus that think any violation of the No Contact Directive should result in immediate suspension, even for the complainant. My argument is that by having a trauma informed lens we need to think twice about the chilling
effect this could create and that the resulting sanction of violating the No Contact Directive should fit the level of the violation. Did they send a “hello” text or did they threaten violence?
I’m being told a violation is violation and both parties should be immediately suspended if they violate the directive- even for a single text message or email. I believe the violation should be evaluated by severity of the violation.
Anyone have this experience with No Contact Directives? How have you handled violations?
-Alina Alina Torres-Zickler Assistant Director Office of Social Equity West Chester University Ph. 610.436.2838 Email: Be kind, for everyone is fighting their own quiet battle. - Cicero |
- Experience with No Contact Directives and Sanctions, Torres-Zickler, Alina M., 02/05/2016
- RE: Experience with No Contact Directives and Sanctions, Shaffer, Jyl (shaffej2), 02/05/2016
- Re: Experience with No Contact Directives and Sanctions, Brett Sokolow, 02/05/2016
- Re: Experience with No Contact Directives and Sanctions, Rina Vaishnav Rhyne, 02/05/2016
- Re: Experience with No Contact Directives and Sanctions, Brett Sokolow, 02/05/2016
- Re: Experience with No Contact Directives and Sanctions, Jen Luettel Schweer, 02/05/2016
- Re: Experience with No Contact Directives and Sanctions, Brett Sokolow, 02/05/2016
- Re: Experience with No Contact Directives and Sanctions, Jen Luettel Schweer, 02/05/2016
- Re: Experience with No Contact Directives and Sanctions, Brett Sokolow, 02/05/2016
- Re: Experience with No Contact Directives and Sanctions, Rina Vaishnav Rhyne, 02/05/2016
- Re: Experience with No Contact Directives and Sanctions, Brett Sokolow, 02/05/2016
- RE: Experience with No Contact Directives and Sanctions, Shaffer, Jyl (shaffej2), 02/05/2016
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