A. Convening Judicial Board Hearings.
- A hearing panel shall be convened as soon as possible, normally within 60 school days of a charge sheet being provided to a respondent.
- A judicial board hearing shall be conducted when the circumstances of the case or responsibility for violation of the Student Code is in dispute and when the Judiciary Council has jurisdiction over the case.
- The chairs of the Judiciary Council shall convene the hearing, select members of the panels (and shall rotate service among all the members of the Judiciary Council) and, except as noted in #8 below, shall conduct the hearing. If both the chair and the associate chair are unable to serve, a hearing panel shall be selected and convened by a dean from Student Affairs. The dean, in addition to the panel, shall select a member of the Judiciary Council to chair the hearing.
- Each hearing panel will be selected and convened to hear only one case.
- The panel for a given case shall include eight students (including, at the start of the hearing, at least three men and three women) in addition to the non-voting chair. A hearing panel quorum is six. Alternate panel members may also be selected.
The panel for a sexual assault case shall include four students (including, at the start of the hearing, at least two men and two women) and one alternate. The panel shall be selected from a pool of Judiciary Board members that have received specific training regarding sexual assault.
- A dean from Student Affairs shall sit on the panel as a non-voting, ex-officio member during the presentation of witnesses and other materials. The dean is present to advise on process and may ask questions of respondent(s) and witnesses to ensure that all pertinent information is considered. The dean may remain after the point at which discussion begins on whether the respondent has violated the Student Code and/or sanctions are applied, if requested to do so by the Judiciary Chair or a majority of the hearing panel. A staff member from the Office of Student Affairs remains for the entire proceeding.
- In exceptional cases where criminal charges are pending or threatened or other extraordinary circumstances exist, the respondent may make a written request to the Vice President and Dean of Students to have an attorney present, at the respondent’s expense. The Dean may accept or deny this petition after discussion with the judiciary chair or the chair of the Student Affairs Committee. An attorney, if allowed, acts only as an advisor. She or he may not act as a spokesperson and may speak only to the respondent. If the respondent has an attorney present, the Dean may allow the complainant and/or the College to be represented in the same limited manner.
- The presiding officer of the hearing panel in cases where attorneys are present shall be a jurist or a retired jurist selected by the President of the College or by the President’s designee. In such cases the chair of the Judiciary Council shall sit as a hearing panel member unless disqualifying circumstances prevent her or his participation.
- The vote of five out of eight members (or four of six or seven members) of the panel is required to find a respondent responsible for a violation of the Student Code or to impose a sanction.
B. Convening Student Affairs Committee Judicial Hearings.
Hearings conducted by SAC shall follow the same procedures as followed by the Judiciary Council, and as specified in section C of this article. However, anything in this section (Section B) that contradicts or otherwise modifies the procedure specified in Section C shall be considered superior.
- The Student Affairs Committee considers cases over which the Judiciary Council has refused or is unable to accept jurisdiction or finds impossible to adjudicate.
- The chair of the Student Affairs Committee shall convene the hearing, notify the committee members of the time and place of the meeting and conduct the hearing (except as noted in #7 below). If the chair is unable to serve, she or he shall designate a Student Affairs Committee member to serve as the hearing panel chair.
- The Student Affairs Committee chair is a non-voting member of the panel except in cases where the vote of the chair is required to break a tie.
- The respondent(s) may challenge up to two members of the SAC, excluding the Chair, when the SAC sits as a Judicial Board and one member when the SAC sits as a Penalty Board. These challenges shall be made by the respondent at least 48 hours prior to the scheduled hearing. The chair may excuse any member of the SAC if he or she feels that the member is unable to hear the case in an impartial manner.
- When the Vice President and Dean of Students is unable to serve because of prior involvement in the case or for any other reason, another Dean from Student Affairs shall sit on the panel as a voting member. A staff member from the Office of Student Affairs remains for the entire proceeding. The Judiciary Council chair shall sit as a non-voting ex-officio member when the SAC convenes as a Judicial body.
- In exceptional cases where criminal charges are pending or other extraordinary circumstances exist, the respondent may make a written request to the Vice President and Dean of Students to have an attorney present, at the respondent’s expense. The Dean may accept or deny this petition after discussion with the judicial chair and the chair of the Student Affairs Committee. An attorney, if allowed, acts only as an advisor. She or he may not act as a spokesperson and may speak only to the respondent. If the respondent has an attorney present, the Dean may allow the complainant and/or the College to be represented in the same limited manner.
- The presiding officer of the SAC, in cases where attorneys are present, shall be a jurist or a retired jurist selected by the President of the College or by the President’s designee. In such cases the chair of the SAC shall sit as a hearing panel member unless disqualifying circumstances (i.e., circumstances which would prevent the rendering of an impartial judgment) prevent her or his participation.
- The Student Affairs Committee, by a majority of those present and voting, may find that a student has violated the Student Code and may impose a sanction.
- If fewer than five members of the SAC (and fewer than three student members of the SAC and fewer than two faculty members of the SAC—a quorum) are available for a hearing, the chair of the SAC shall draw student hearing panel members from the Judicial Council and faculty hearing panel members from the Executive Committee of the Faculty.
C. Hearing procedures for Judicial Board and Student Affairs Committee.
- The chair presides at hearings (unless an attorney will participate in the hearing, in which case a jurist or a retired jurist presides). The presiding officer shall conduct the hearing to ensure the fair presentation of all evidence and witnesses. She or he shall:
- Describe the procedures under which the hearing will be conducted.
- Read the charges and remind the respondent of his or her rights.
- Indicate the order in which evidence and testimony will be presented.
- Discuss the standard of judgment to be applied to the case ensuring that all panel members understand the College’s standard of clear and convincing evidence and the presumption of innocence. If the panel is hearing a sexual misconduct case, including allegations of sexual assault or sexual harassment, the College’s standard of evidence will be a preponderance of the evidence.
- Indicate that all decisions must be based on information presented at the hearing.
- To safeguard the privacy of respondents, complainants and victims, the members of the hearing panel shall at no time discuss cases outside of the hearing. If any member discusses a case prior to or following the hearing, that member shall immediately be disqualified from the case and dismissed from all further judicial responsibilities. Likewise, statements of complainants, victims, respondents and witnesses, whether written or oral, are confidential and may not be used or quoted for any purpose outside of the hearing.
- The complainant, the respondent and the victim have the right to have an advisor present at the hearing. The advisor must be a member of the College community but not a member of the Judiciary Council, the Student Affairs Committee or a witness in the case; and not, without written permission of the Vice President and Dean of Students, an attorney.
- Hearings shall be conducted in private. Persons who are appropriately present at all hearings on facts are: the respondent, the complainant, the victim, the chair, the hearing panel members, the community representative, the advisors to the chair, the respondent, the complainant and the victim, a Dean from Student Affairs and a staff member from the Office of Student Affairs.
- The Chair may authorize the attendance of persons who are not normally authorized to attend the hearing or order the hearing room cleared or order any person to leave. A majority vote of panel members present may overrule the decision of the chair.
- A single recording shall be made of all hearings during the time that witnesses and other pertinent information are being presented. Deliberations about whether or not the Student Code has been violated or about sanctions shall not be recorded. The recording will be kept in the Office of Student Affairs. If the case is appealed to the Appeals Board, the respondent, the complainant, the victim, their advisors, the community representative, the Judiciary Chair, the chair of the Student Affairs Committee, Deans from Student Affairs, the Appeals Board Chair and the Appeals Board panel members may listen to the recording. Only the named individuals have the privilege of hearing a recording of a Pomona College Judiciary hearing. The recording is the property of Pomona College. Students authorized to hear the recording must do so in the Office of Student Affairs or in an area arranged by the Office of Student Affairs. Students may not copy the recording or receive copies of it. The recording will be kept for one calendar year following the end of an appeal.
- A respondent may challenge up to two members of the hearing panel if the respondent believes that member(s) cannot provide impartial consideration of the case. The Judiciary Council Chair may give permission to the respondent to question panel members prior to deciding whether to excuse a member. The individual(s) who is challenged may be replaced on the hearing panel by another member drawn from the Judiciary Council. Four alternates—two men and two women—may be available for this purpose at hearings. Respondents shall not have the right to ask that the hearing chair be excused from the panel. For sexual assault cases, a respondent, complainant and victim may challenge up to two members of the hearing panel if the respondent, complainant or victim believes that member(s) cannot provide impartial consideration of the case. The Judiciary Council Chair may give permission to the respondent, complainant and victim to question panel members prior to deciding whether to excuse a member.
- All parties to an incident (or to incidents that represent a continuation of a Student Code violation that occurred previously) will have their cases heard together in one Judicial or Penalty board hearing so that all facts relevant to the role of each respondent may be considered. When a violation involves an identifiable unit such as a sponsor group or some portion of a residence hall and/or behavior such as vandalism within a hall, noise, or other behavior disruptive to campus life, a Dean of Campus Student Affairs may charge a group of students and the Judiciary hearing panel shall hear their cases together.
- If the respondent has been appropriately notified and fails to appear at the time and place set for the hearing, the Chair may elect to conduct a hearing in the respondent’s absence or to arrange a new hearing. If he or she fails to appear a second time, he or she may be charged with failure to obey the summons of the Judiciary Council and the scheduled hearing shall be conducted without the presence of the respondent.
- As the hearing begins, the community representative shall be recognized to present the facts related to the alleged violation of the Student Code. This presentation shall impartially state the facts of the case as they have been determined by the community representative. The community representative shall recognize those with information to contribute and shall present other information discovered in the course of examining the case.
- On the conclusion of the presentation by the community representative, the respondent may speak on his or her behalf and request that additional information be presented or additional witnesses called.
- The complainant, the respondent, the victim, the community representative, the Dean from the Student Affairs and the chair shall all have the privilege of presenting witnesses. The chair, panel members, the respondent, the victim, the community representative and the dean from Student Affairs shall have the right to question all witnesses.
- The victim and/or a dean from Student Affairs may provide statements about the impact of the respondent’s actions on the victim or the college community.
- In all sexual misconduct cases, the complainant shall be offered the opportunity to participate in the hearing without facing the respondent. The Judiciary Council Chair shall work out an acceptable method of carrying out this request. For example, the room may be partitioned so that the complainant and the respondent do not see each other. Additionally, the complainant and respondent have the right to participate in the judicial hearing by phone. Parties may be seated in an arrangement that is most comfortable. Arrangements can be made to have one party in the room and the other on speakerphone. Questions may be asked over the phone, from a different room by speakerphone, or through a third party. In any case the respondent shall have the opportunity to have questions asked of the complainant during the hearing process and to hear the responses.
If the complainant does not want a hearing in which the complainant and respondent are separated, the usual Judiciary Council procedures shall apply.
- Pertinent records, exhibits and written statements may be accepted as evidence for consideration by the hearing panel at the discretion of the Chair. In all sexual misconduct cases, the Judiciary Board, at the request of anyone, can redact the name and personal information of a witness or complainant from the documents that are provided to the panel.
- The Chair shall exclude evidence that does not meet college standards. Evidence shall be limited to:
- Facts pertinent to the charge.
- Circumstances or attitudes that might affect the severity of any sanction imposed.
- Arguments addressing the applicability of the regulation on which the charge is based to the facts of the case.
- The Chair and Associate Chair of the Judiciary Council shall have the power to summon the presence of administration, staff, faculty, and students of Pomona College. The Chair shall use this power to bring witnesses required by the respondent, the complainant, the victim or the community representative. If a student does not appear when given a summons to appear, the Judiciary Council may impose sanctions.
- A simple majority of the panel may overrule the decisions of the Chair regarding procedures not mandatory in the Student Code.
- The complainant and the victim shall be given the opportunity to respond to the presentations of both the community representative and the respondent.
- The respondent shall be given the opportunity to make the closing statement or presentation.
- The hearing panel may recess at any time upon decision of the Chair to provide for gathering additional information or simply to provide a break in the hearing or the deliberation.
- All information upon which the decision may be based shall be introduced into evidence in the presence of the respondent at the hearing. The decision as to whether or not the Student Code has been violated shall be based solely upon such information. The respondent is entitled to a presumption of innocence and evidence supporting a violation must be clear and convincing. If the hearing concerns claims of sexual misconduct, including allegations of sexual assault or harassment, the respondent is entitled to a presumption of innocence and evidence supporting a violation must meet the preponderance of evidence standard.
- After the hearing has been concluded, the panel shall go into closed session to determine whether the respondent has violated the Student Code and, if he or she is found to have violated the Code, what sanctions should be imposed. This phase of the hearing shall not be tape recorded.
- Present for the decision of whether or not the respondent(s) has violated the Student Code and, if required, discussion of an appropriate sanction are the Chair, all panel members and the Student Affairs Office staff member. A Dean from Student Affairs may remain as an advisor to the chair on process if requested to do so by the Judiciary Chair or a majority of the hearing panel.
- If the panel requires more information, clarification of facts or additional time, the Chair shall recess and later reconvene the hearing. The respondent, the respondent’s advisor, the complainant, the victim and their advisors, the community representative, the Dean from the Student Affairs Office and the Student Affairs staff member may be present when the hearing is reconvened if information is presented or clarified.
- The hearing panel shall first consider the question of whether the respondent has violated the Student Code. The panel may find that the respondent has committed a violation if the information presented in the hearing provides clear and convincing evidence of such violation. In the case of a hearing that concerns claims of sexual misconduct, including allegations of sexual assault or harassment, the panel may find that the respondent committed a violation if the information presented meets the preponderance of evidence standard.
- A respondent’s previous conduct record shall not be made available to the panel until after the decision concerning whether or not the respondent violated the Student Code has been reached. It shall play no role in determining whether or not a violation has occurred.
- If a respondent is found to have violated the Student Code, this panel shall then consider sanctions. Participants are the same as those involved in determining whether a violation of the Student Code has occurred.
- The respondent’s previous conduct record shall be considered in assessing a sanction. That record will be provided to the hearing panel by the Office of Student Affairs.
- In assigning sanctions, the hearing panel shall consider the kind of violation, the attitude of the respondent, his or her previous conduct record, and the circumstances under which the offense was committed.
- When a sanction requires a period of time for completion, the deadline for completion shall be specified. The respondent must report to a member of the Office of Campus Life when he or she has completed the sanction. The case is not complete/closed until the sanction has been completed.
- If the respondent does not complete his or her sanction by the stated deadline, the Office of Campus Life shall report this fact to the Judiciary Council chairs or the Student Affairs Committee chair who may assign a new and more severe sanction.
- The Chair shall inform the respondent and the Office of Student Affairs of the results of the hearing. The Chair shall file a written opinion which explains the reasons for the decision with the Vice President and Dean of Students. The Office of Student Affairs shall issue an official letter of notification to the respondent. When a hearing involves an incident of a violent nature, the Office of Student Affairs, upon written request, shall notify the alleged victim of the results.
- In accordance with College policy, decisions made or actions taken under the Student Code shall not be posted on a student’s academic record (transcript).
D. Convening Penalty Board Hearings and Hearing Procedures.
If a respondent agrees to the charges of the case and signs a charge sheet so indicating, the case shall be presented to a Penalty Board hearing for consideration of an appropriate penalty. Since the respondent has accepted responsibility for a violation of the Student Code, a full judicial hearing is not required to determine whether or not a violation has occurred. The procedures in a Penalty Board hearing include:
- A Penalty Board hearing shall consist of the non-voting Judiciary chair and four members of the Judiciary council—two men and two women—selected by the Judiciary Council chair on a rotating basis. These five students constitute a quorum. A dean from Student Affairs shall sit on the panel as a non-voting ex-officio member up to the point at which discussion of sanctions begins. The dean shall remain for the discussion of sanctions to advise on process if asked to do so by the Judiciary Chair or a majority of the penalty board members. A staff member from the Office of Student Affairs remains for the entire hearing.
- Penalty Board hearings shall be closed. Witnesses, complainants, victims and community representatives are not required to determine the facts of the situation, which have been agreed to by the respondent. The Chair may authorize the attendance of individuals not normally present but may be overruled by majority vote of the panel.
- The respondent and his or her advisor may attend the hearing to provide a statement about the Student Code violation or he or she may submit a written statement to the board. The written statement shall be presented to the Chair 24 hours in advance.
- The victim and/or a dean from the Office of Student Affairs may provide statements about the impact of the respondent’s actions on the victim or the college community.
- Three out of four members of the penalty board must agree on the sanction in order for it to be assigned to the respondent. If there is no agreement the case shall be referred to a second penalty board. If three out of four members of the second penalty board cannot reach agreement on the sanction, a full judicial board shall be appointed to serve as a penalty board.
- A respondent may challenge one member of the penalty board if the respondent believes that the member cannot provide impartial consideration of the case. A respondent may not ask the Chair be removed from the panel. The Judiciary Council Chair may give permission to the respondent to question panel members prior to deciding whether to excuse a member. The individual who is challenged shall be replaced on the hearing panel by another member of the same sex drawn from the Judiciary Council.
- Penalty Board proceedings shall be tape recorded up to the point at which deliberation on sanctions begins.
- To safeguard the privacy of respondents, complainants and victims, the members of the hearing panel shall at no time discuss cases outside of the hearing. If any member discusses a case prior to or following the hearing , that member shall be immediately disqualified from the case and dismissed from all further judicial responsibilities.
- The chair shall inform the respondent and the Office of Student Affairs of the results of the hearing. The Office of Student Affairs shall issue an official letter of notification to the respondent. The decision of the hearing panel becomes effective immediately upon notification unless it requires suspension or expulsion.
E. Cross Campus Complaints
In cases where an alleged code violation has occurred on another campus or the complainant is from another campus, the College will take measures to ensure that the complainant understands the Pomona College Student Code and to ensure the impartiality of the Judiciary Council or Penalty Board, as provided in the Student Code. After a hearing is concluded, a copy of the record to be included in the precedent file shall be sent to the Dean of Students of the complainant’s home campus.
- The Judiciary Chair shall appoint a member of the Judiciary Council to act as an advisor to the complainant. The advisor shall explain to the complainant the Student Code and the judicial process as it applies to the case. The advisor may be present at the hearing as an additional advisor.
- At the discretion of the Judiciary Council Chair, the dean of students from the complainant’s home campus may appoint an impartial observer for the hearing. The observer shall write a signed evaluation of the hearing process to be submitted to the Judiciary Chair for internal review, and to the Dean of Students at the complainant’s home campus. The evaluation shall address issues of impartiality and process.
- The cross-campus observer’s presence at the hearing is subject to the following conditions:
- The observer shall sign the confidentiality agreement required of all Judiciary Council members.
- The observer shall not speak, answer questions, ask questions, or in any way influence the hearing.
- At the conclusion of the hearing, the Judiciary Chair shall give the observer a form on which to make the evaluation.
- The observer must complete and submit the evaluation before leaving the location of the hearing.
- The observer shall surrender all notes about the hearing to the Judiciary Chair after completing the evaluation.
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