Sexual Assault on College Campuses: Is Secrecy Putting Students at Risk?
Officials at the University of Colorado know about a pattern of alleged date-rape drug use at a fraternity in Boulder, but say the law prevents them from naming the fraternity to police.
An investigation of sexual assault on college campuses found CU and others colleges across Colorado are withholding information about sexual assaults against students.
But the issue is more nuanced than first glance might suggest: Advocates say the secrecy is necessary to protect rape victims who wouldn’t come forward otherwise. Law enforcement officials say the secrecy may be allowing more people to fall victim.
This tension is emerging amid major changes in the way universities in Colorado try to prevent sexual assault, and how they publicly report crime on campus. And it matters to all of us because the effects of what some experts are calling an “epidemic” of assaults nationwide are long-lasting and costly to society.












College campuses in Colorado have used the claim of secrecy for years to cover up rapes. Prosecutions are rare. As a result, serial rapists target campuses and students (both male and female) have no idea that sexual predators view campuses as prime territory.
The only people that the secrecy protects are college officials.
By censuring the information, the campuses enable the rapists.
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