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A federal court in South Carolina recently granted a university’s motion to compel arbitration of a case involving a former student’s claim arising from his suspension after being accused of sexual harassment and stalking.

The plaintiff was a former student at the South Carolina campus of a for-profit university.  He alleged that another student falsely represented that he had stalked and sexually harassed her.  He further alleged he was dismissed from the university’s Licensed Practical Nursing program for a semester in March 17, 2023 without a Title IX investigation or hearing. The plaintiff alleged the complainant’s allegations were found to be false, but she was not disciplined.

The plaintiff claimed there was “a hostile educational environment” when he went back to school after the suspension.  He also alleged that a member of the university’s administration was aware that another student had threatened his life but allowed the student to remain in the program without reprimand.

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Washington law affords juvenile suspects additional protections.  RCW 13.40.740 which became effective on January 1, 2022, requires law enforcement to “provide a juvenile with access to an attorney for consultation” in certain circumstances, including a custodial interrogation, before they waive any constitutional rights.  A juvenile’s statements made under those circumstances are generally not admissible unless the juvenile received access to an attorney and made a knowing, intelligent, and voluntary waiver after being fully informed of their rights. Such statements may be use, however, for impeachment or if they were “made spontaneously.” A defendant recently challenged her conviction, based partly on the court allowing interrogation evidence when she had not consulted with an attorney.

According to the Washington Supreme Court, the sixteen-year-old defendant was involved in a brief fight with another teenage girl, H.D., at a mall. Several months later, she received messages from H.D. and others on January 29, 2021, about wanting to fight her. The following day, another teenage girl, S.P.T., asked H.D. to text the defendant and say H.D. wanted to fight her.  The defendant testified she didn’t think H.D. actually wanted to fight and sent her address. She did not know H.D. sent her address to S.P.T.

After receiving a text H.D. was six minutes away, the defendant put a pocketknife in her pocket. She testified she always carried the knife. When S.P.T. arrived, the discussion escalated into a verbal altercation.  The defendant testified she held the open knife behind her back because she was afraid the situation would become physical.

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The Washington Supreme Court recently considered a case in which a resentencing court declined to consider the defendant’s youthfulness at the time he committed the crime. According to Court’s opinion, the defendant pleaded guilty to second degree murder for a crime that occurred when he was 18 years old.  His offender score was 4, including a prior drug possession conviction. The standard sentencing range was 225-325 months and he was sentenced to 300 months.  The judge also imposed restitution, jointly and severally with his codefendants, including part of the victim’s funeral expenses.

The Washington Supreme Court held that former RCW 69.50.4013(1), part of the simple drug possession statute, violated due process rights and was void in State v. Blake. After State v. Blake, the defendant was eligible to have his unlawful drug possession conviction vacated. This caused his offender score to drop to 3, thereby lowering the standard range.

The defendant requested that his youthfulness be considered in resentencing. The resentencing judge stated, “. . . that’s a different issue than the one we’re talking about today.”

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The court in a Washington divorce case has broad discretion in characterizing the parties’ assets.  Characterization is determined as of the date of acquisition and generally does not change.  Separate property continues to be separate while it can be traced or identified.  Property acquired during the marriage may be separate property if it was acquired with the traceable proceeds of a spouse’s separate property.  There is, however, a presumption that property acquired while the parties are married is community property. A spouse claiming that property acquired during the marriage is separate has the burden of showing it is separate through clear and convincing evidence.  In a recent unpublished case, a former wife challenged the characterization of property purchased during the marriage.

Before the parties got married in 1999, they signed a prenuptial agreement stating the husband would maintain ownership of the property he had at the time of the marriage.  He owned property in Montana before the marriage.

The parties divorced in 2002.  The court awarded the husband the property he owned when they got married in accordance with the prenuptial agreement.

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Students who experience disciplinary action resulting from Title IX allegations sometimes file their own Title IX lawsuit against the school, alleging the investigation and disciplinary process was discriminatory.  In addition to Title IX claims, they may file equal protection, breach of contract, and other claims.  In a recent case, school employees sought dismissal of the student’s equal protection claims with prejudice.

The plaintiff alleged he was expelled from a Nebraska university after being falsely accused of rape.  He alleged the investigation and Title IX hearing were biased. He also alleged that the chair of the hearing board and the Title IX Coordinator had violated his constitutional rights by treating him differently because of sex-based discriminatory animus.

He filed § 1983 claims against the university employees in their individual capacities alleging they violated his equal protection rights.  He asked for “compensatory and emotional damages.” He also sought a permanent injunction prohibiting references to the investigation in his records and a declaration the adjudication had violated his rights to equal protection.

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School authorities may search students and their property in circumstances that the police could not.  In a recent case, a juvenile challenged a juvenile court adjudication of knowingly possessing cannabis after a school district safety coordinator searched his vehicle.

According to the appeals court’s unpublished opinion, the school district security coordinator saw the juvenile get out of his car in the high school parking lot, hold something like he was smoking it, and put it in what appeared to be a pocket on the car door.

The security coordinator detained the juvenile and the school contacted his mother. The security coordinator and the juvenile’s mother searched the car together.  They found a jar containing what was later determined to be cannabis.

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In many Washington criminal cases, a plea agreement may be an appropriate resolution.  A plea agreement is a contract, and in some circumstances, that contract may be breached.  When the state agrees to a sentencing recommendation, it does not have to be enthusiastic in making that recommendation to the court, but it may breach the agreement if it undermines the terms of the agreement.  The state may undercut the plea agreement by providing the sentencing court with unsolicited information.  An appeals court considers the effect the state’s actions had and not the state’s intent. A defendant recently challenged his sentence, arguing the state had breached the plea agreement.

According to the appeals court’s unpublished opinion, the defendant drove the wrong way on an on-ramp and hit another vehicle.  Two people in the other car died and a third received treatment at the hospital.  The passenger in the defendant’s vehicle was also injured.  The defendant’s blood alcohol concentration was 0.14 within two hours after the wreck.

The state ultimately charged the defendant with two counts of vehicular homicide. The state had charged the defendant with vehicular assault of his passenger, but later dropped that charge. The defendant agreed to plead guilty on both counts and stipulated his offender score was 2. The state agreed to make a sentence recommendation of 95 months concurrent confinement, which was the low end of the sentencing range.

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Washington recognizes committed intimate relationships (“CIRs”), which are cohabiting relationships that are stable and like a marriage, although both parties know they are not lawfully married. Washington courts will distribute community-like property from a CIR in a just and equitable manner.  A man recently appealed a property division after a court found he had been in a CIR with his former partner.

According to the appeals court’s unpublished opinion, the parties were involved in a CIR between 2009 and 2021. The man conceded the existence of the CIR on appeal. The man owned a home in Seattle and the woman moved into it with him in June 2009.  They moved to Bainbridge Island in approximately 2011 and remained there until the CIR ended in July 2021.

The woman petitioned for a distribution of the parties’ community-like property.  She testified she had helped with the mortgage and other expenses when they lived in Seattle.  She did not however, testify regarding the value of her work or whether it increased the value of the home.

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The Department of Education recently issued a press release stating that it found a Virginia public school district had violated Title IX by failing to respond to sexual harassment reports.

According to news reports, the school had a policy allowing students to use locker rooms and restrooms aligning with their gender identity. Male students allegedly harassed a transgender student in the boys’ locker room.   According to the press release, that student recorded two male students in the locker room.  Title IX complaints were filed by the parents of all three students.

According to the press release, the school did not “treat the male students equitably throughout the Title IX investigation process. . .” The press release stated the school had not meaningfully investigated the male students’ complaints, “yet thoroughly investigated the female student’s sexual harassment complaint. . .”

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A parent seeking modification of a Washington parenting plan must meet the statutory criteria for modification. A father recently challenged a court’s determination he failed to show adequate cause for a hearing on his modification petition.

According to the appeals court’s unpublished opinion, the parties divorced in April 2019 and the court entered an agreed parenting plan, which did not establish a residential schedule.  The parenting plan provided the four children would live with their mother, except scheduled to live with the father.  The parties were to engage in a good faith effort to reach an agreement for the schedule for the month by the 20th of the preceding month.

The father petitioned for a minor modification in February 2020, alleging there was no mandatory minimum residential time for him and the mother intentionally kept him from having residential time.

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