Ga. Intermediate Court Weighs State University Sovereign Immunity in Case Over Bar Fight
The Superior Court of Athens-Clarke County ruled Georgia's criminal self-defense provision required the University of Georgia to expressly incorporate language adopting the standards of self-defense applied in criminal cases. The state Board of Regents appealed.
March 26, 2024 at 06:19 PM
5 minute read
What You Need to Know
- The University System of Georgia Board of Regents argued that the University of Georgia holds its students to a higher code of conduct than the state's criminal statutes.
- Meanwhile, the appellees argued there's a difference between presenting evidence and it being fully considered in a disciplinary hearing.
- Ultimately, appellee counsel Luke Boggs said this is a question of law that goes beyond just the dispute in this case.
The Georgia Court of Appeals grilled the parties in a dispute between a University of Georgia student and the state Board of Regents on Tuesday, as the latter argued that the courts can't override decisions made by the state public university governing body.
The underlying legal action concerned the aftermath of a bar fight between University of Georgia student and appellee Elijah Drake and three female students that unfolded in the men's bathroom of a downtown Athens bar when Drake was a freshman.
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