Conflicting Information About Jeanne Ann Clery and What Happened to Her Case After June 11th 1992 - #August 29th 1986 at Westminster College (Fulton, Missouri) - #Michael Ayele (a.k.a) W

Autor: Michael A. Ayele (A.K.A) W
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2023
Předmět:
#Academic Honesty
#Academic Integrity
#Academic Responsibility
#Affirmative & Effective Consent in Healthy Sexual Relations on American College/University Campuses
#Jeanne Ann Clery Case Transferred to the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) on June 11th 1992 by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
#Michael Ayele (a.k.a) W Calendar Year 2010

#Jeanne Ann Clery Case Apparently Transferred to the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) on June 11th 1992
#Academic Honesty
#Academic Integrity
#Michael A. Ayele (a.k.a) W
#Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Initiate Contact With the CIA About Jeanne Clery on June 11th 1992
#Affirmative & Effective Consent in Healthy Sexual Relations on American College/University Campuses
#Jeanne Ann Clery (November 23rd 1966 - April 05th 1986)
#Academic Responsibility
#Association for the Advancement of Civil Liberties (AACL)
DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.8022591
Popis: Conflicting Information About Jeanne Ann Clery and What Happened to Her Case After June 11th 1992 - #August 29th 1986 at Westminster College (Fulton, Missouri) - #Michael Ayele (a.k.a) W Even though the Department of Justice (DOJ) Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) say that they had initiated contact with the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) on (or around) June 11th 1992 about the April 05th 1986 rape and murder of Jeanne Ann Clery, the CIA have denied this. The Association for the Advancement of Civil Liberties (AACL) would like to take this opportunity to note that Westminster College (Fulton, Missouri) had extended an invitation to the then-FBI Director William Webster on August 29th 1986 (approximately five months after the April 05th 1986 rape and murder of Jeanne Ann Clery). On October 31st 1986, William Webster had accepted the invitation extended to him by Westminster College. William Webster was Director of the FBI (from 1978 to 1987) and Director of the CIA (from 1987 to 1991). His father Thomas H. Webster is an alumnus of Westminster College (Fulton, Missouri). Michael A. Ayele (a.k.a) W has attended Westminster College as a full-time undergraduate student between January 2010 and May 2013. He became an alumnus of Westminster College on December 31st2016. According to the National Council on Disability (NCD), [1] “affirmative and effective consent” is being taught to college/university students of the United States of America (U.S.A) during the course of their Freshman year, [2] college/university students are informed about “healthy sexual relationships” during the course of their 1st(first) year of post-secondary academic education; [3] 20% (twenty percent) of women were sexually assaulted in a college/university setting by the time they reached their Senior year in Calendar Year 2005; [4] 32% (thirty two percent) of women with a disability were sexually assaulted during Calendar Years 2014 and 2015 in a college/university setting; [5] sexual assault “is a public health and public safety concern with far reaching implications;” [6] sexual assault is a “deeply personal violation,” which “leaves physical and emotional impacts that change the lives of victims;” [7] sexual assault causes “long term physical, psychological, and emotional effects, including depression, post-traumatic stress, thoughts of suicide, flashbacks, and sleep disorders.” The rape and murder of Jeanne Ann Clery continues to leave several key questions about Title IX of the Education Amendments Act of 1972 unaddressed. These questions include but are not limited to the following.1) What are/were colleges/universities in the U.S.A obligations pursuant to Title IX of the Education Amendments Act of 1972? Were colleges/universities throughout the U.S.A required by law to denounce violence committed against women irrespective of their racial backgrounds, their sexual orientations, their religious affiliations and their national origins following the enactment of Title IX of the Education Amendments Act of 1972? If yes, were colleges/universities required to inform their students about what constitute appropriate sexual boundaries pursuant to Title IX of the Education Amendments Act of 1972? 2) Did colleges/universities throughout the U.S.A begin informing their students about what constitute “affirmative and effective consent” following the enactment of Title IX of the Education Amendments Act of 1972? If not, when did colleges/universities begin to inform their incoming freshmen/transfer students about the concepts of “affirmative and effective consent?” Did colleges/universities throughout the U.S.A begin teaching the concepts of “affirmative and effective consent” to their incoming freshmen/transfer students following the rape and murder of Jeanne Ann Clery (dated April 05th 1986)? If yes, why have colleges/universities throughout the U.S.A fixated on the rape and murder of this Caucasian woman by a Black/African American man to inform their incoming freshmen/transfer students about what constitutes “affirmative and effective consent?” 3) Are colleges/universities discussions pertaining to what constitutes “affirmative and effective consent” consistent with Title IX of the Education Amendments Act of 1972 if they are first informing their incoming/freshmen students about the rape and murder of Jeanne Ann Clery? Are colleges/universities discussions pertaining to what constitutes “affirmative and effective consent” consistent with their academic integrity policy if they are first informing their incoming freshmen/transfer students about the rape and murder of Jeanne Ann Clery?4) Were there forces out there in the 1970s and the 1980s looking for a case where a Black man rapes and murders a Caucasian woman for the purpose of enacting a law similar to the Jeanne Clery Act? Was the enactment of the Jeanne Clery Act the result of racist and sexist individuals coming together for the purpose of [a] preventing racial minorities from climbing the social ladder through academic education; [b] cracking down on interracial relationships particularly between a Caucasian woman and a Black/African American man; [c] not applying the same standards in circumstances where a Caucasian man sexually assaults a woman from a racial minority (as in the case of Brock Turner and Chanel Miller following her rape on January 18th2015 at the campus of Stanford University)? As a matter of principle, the AACL unequivocally condemns violence committed against women irrespective of their racial backgrounds, their sexual orientations, their national origins, their religious affiliations and/or their disability status. Be well. Take care. Keep yourselves at arms distance. W (AACL) Michael A. Ayele Anti-Racist Human Rights Activist Audio-Visual Media Analyst Anti-Propaganda Journalist 
Databáze: OpenAIRE