Pubdate: Thu, 03 Aug 2006 Source: Akron Beacon Journal (OH) Copyright: 2006 The Beacon Journal Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.ohio.com/mld/beaconjournal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/6 Author: John Higgins Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Charles+Plinton PANEL CALLS FOR CHANGES IN UA POLICY Higher burden of proof recommended in disciplinary hearings for students The University of Akron should have to provide more proof than it does now that a student has violated school rules, and it should use felon informants on campus "with extreme caution and only in rare circumstances." Those are among 40 recommendations an independent policy review commission submitted to the UA president Wednesday with the intent of assuring a fairer, more transparent and more accountable disciplinary process. University President Luis Proenza appointed the independent commission in April in response to Akron Beacon Journal articles about Charles Plinton, a former graduate student who was suspended from the university on an allegation of dealing drugs to a confidential informant despite his acquittal by a jury in a criminal trial. Plinton was suspended for a semester in 2004 and never returned to campus. In December, he took his own life, telling his mother the day he died that he should have had his master's degree. Although the commission recommends greater safeguards for accused students, it does not challenge the university's right to disregard a not-guilty verdict in criminal court. The commission acknowledged that many people may not understand the difference between a criminal process and an administrative hearing. "The commentary that came up repeatedly in the newspaper, in the public forum, on the block, at the bank, was the fact that a student was found innocent and then found responsible," said commission member Barbara Mathews, senior vice president and manager of public affairs for FirstMerit Bank. Fellow member J. Dean Carro of the UA law school explained after the Wednesday meeting that "not guilty" isn't the same as "innocent," and different standards apply in different arenas. O.J. Simpson, for example, was found not guilty of murder in criminal court, but he was found liable for wrongful death in civil court, which has a lower burden of proof. Burden of Proof The most significant recommendation places a higher burden of proof on the university in student disciplinary hearings involving felony and misdemeanor offenses. The legal term for the level of evidence is "clear and convincing," the second highest burden of proof, behind "beyond a reasonable doubt," which is applied in criminal court. Ohio State University applies the same high standard to serious nonacademic offenses. But most universities in Ohio use the less rigorous "preponderance of evidence" standard, which applies in civil court; it requires that more than 50 percent of the evidence indicate guilt. UA requires a "substantial" burden of proof, which is the lowest standard of 12 Ohio universities surveyed for the commission's report. Other recommendations seek to improve student awareness of the process and involve more high-level administrators in consequential decisions regarding findings and sanctions, especially for serious offenses. Proenza is to meet with the board of trustees Wednesday and is to receive a complete report from the commission Aug. 16. Proenza asked the Rev. Ronald Fowler of the Arlington Church of God to lead the independent commission, which comprises eight community and campus members. Fowler commended the members Wednesday and said he was pleased with their work. "There's a lot here that adds safety and fairness to the process, that ensures accountability -- we raised that significantly," Fowler said. Many who spoke at the commission's public forum in May also complained about the decision to place a confidential informant with a lengthy criminal record in student housing. The commission recommends that informants shouldn't have a history of violent behavior, and the university president and the vice president of student affairs must approve the use of an informant on campus. Both should receive monthly reports if an informant is placed in student housing. Criminal Background The university currently does not have a confidential informant on campus. Felons are not expressly forbidden from student housing, and the university does not ask housing applicants about their criminal background, although registered sex offenders are not permitted in student housing. Richard Dale Harris was the informant who was installed in Plinton's dorm in 2004 and identified Plinton as the one who sold him about a third of an ounce of marijuana. Harris had a lengthy criminal history that included a 1998 indictment on charges of felonious assault and robbery -- charges that later were dismissed when he pleaded guilty to theft. Harris is no longer an informant for the Summit County Drug Unit. On July 24, Harris pleaded guilty in Summit County Common Pleas Court to cocaine possession. The commission also recommends more thorough and timely police documentation. A UA officer testified in Plinton's trial that the student admitted when he was arrested that he had sold marijuana, but the officer didn't document Plinton's alleged statement until about a week before the trial. At the commission's final meeting Wednesday, members discussed how the public might perceive their work. Carro, a UA law professor, acknowledged that some people will be unhappy that the commission isn't ruling out the use of informants with criminal backgrounds. "That's going to be a hard sell, given the history," he said. Frederic Zuch, retired assistant Summit County prosecutor, said the commission did address at least one of the complaints. "In addition to the felon issue, the biggest thing was that the president didn't even know this," Zuch said. "How many times did we hear that at the forum? And certainly this covers that issue." The commission didn't consider how to handle not-guilty verdicts until its final Wednesday meeting. The panel wants hearing board members to receive some of the basic cautions that criminal juries hear from judges about how to weigh certain evidence. The commission added another caution Wednesday: "The decision to find or not find a student responsible should not be determined by any court decision." That means a student's not-guilty verdict in another court doesn't get a student off the hook with the university. "The (U.S.) Supreme Court consistently says you're not entitled to a perfect trial, you're entitled to a fair trial," Carro said. "And what the Reverend (Fowler) is trying to do here is create a fair process." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake