Austin Federal Judge Orders Baylor to Turn Over Pepper Hamilton Investigation to Plaintiffs
An Austin federal judge has ordered Baylor University to turn over to 10 female plaintiffs suing the school materials related to a Pepper Hamilton investigation that concluded that its administrators failed to protect women from sexual assault.
August 14, 2017 at 03:00 PM
4 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Texas Lawyer
An Austin federal judge has ordered Baylor University to turn over to 10 female plaintiffs suing the school materials related to a Pepper Hamilton investigation that concluded that its administrators failed to protect women from sexual assault.
Baylor University hired the Philadelphia law firm in 2015 to conduct an independent investigation in the wake of a scandal in which numerous women alleged they had been sexually assaulted by members of the school's football team. The firm's investigation concluded that university officials had not done enough to stop rape on campus, prompting Baylor's Board of Regents to fire head football coach Art Briles and demote Baylor Chancellor Ken Starr, who later resigned from the school.
The 10 women later sued Baylor alleging Title IX violations, specifically that the school discouraged them from reporting their assaults and created a harassing environment forcing them to leave campus and depriving them of a college education.
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