Student Government Investigation and FERPA: an MLive Fisking

Submitted by BiSB on

An article ran today on MLive, and I felt the need to respond, mostly because it was bullshit.  The article was entitled "U-M stymies student governmen's review of Brendan Gibbons sexual assault investigation." I don't want to call it a hack job, but it has several hack marks as if somehow hacked at by a hacking device.

University of Michigan's student government wants to review the school's sexual assault investigation involving ex-football player Brendan Gibbons — but U-M has refused to disclose investigation documents.

They confuse "has refused to disclose" with "is legally prevented from disclosing." We've been through this, but FERPA (20 USC 1232g) is a federal law that prevents the disclosure of any "education records" to anyone that does not fall into one of the exception categories without the permission of the student.

Education records are defined as "those records, files, documents, and other materials which (i) contain information directly related to a student; and (ii) are maintained by an educational agency or institution or by a person acting for such agency or institution." Investigation documents pertain to a student (Brendan Gibbons), and were created and maintained by the University. They are educational records.

The CSG (the student government) does not fall under any of the exceptions that would allow UofM to release records to them. The closest exception is 1232g(b)(1)(A), which allows the release to othe "school officials"  with a "legitimate educational interest" [ED: see the update below]. But the CSG is not a school official (nor are its officers), and they have no legitimate educational interest.

So, as a matter of federal law, Michigan cannot release investigation documents to the CSG. Full stop.

The Central Student Government and U-M administrators disagree about whether student government should be given access to investigation documents.

"It's a little disappointing on our end," said CSG president Michael Proppe, a senior statistics major. "A review would have provided transparency about this process."

The whole point of FERPA is to prevent 'transparency" with student records. But we'll get back to that later.

CSG believes it has the right to review the investigation due to a provision in U-M's student discipline code allowing a CSG representative to review discipline cases.

U-M's Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities reads:

"Periodic, regular review of records of resolution actions will be made available, in confidence, to the Code of Conduct Advisory Board Chair of CSG."

But U-M is refusing to provide access to the investigation documents.

Okay, a quick primer in Federal law: it trumps the U-M Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities. It trumps it by a lot. Like the Right Bower trumps an off nine. So even IF this was the subject matter to which the Statement referred, it doesn't matter. Federal law wins.

The school has again cited student privacy and also maintained that under revisions made to the sexual misconduct policy in 2011, sexual misconduct reviews no longer fall under the Statement of Student Responsibilities.

Cool. And irrelevant. If the investigation records fall under FERPA (they do), then it couldn't matter less for the present case if they are included in the Statement of Student Responsibilities.

"We aren't making those reports available," U-M spokesman Rick Fitzgerald said.

A review would have provided transparency about this process.

"We've maintained all along that case-specific files and anything that would be an investigation report are considered to be educational records protected by the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, so we cannot share those with the CSG taskforce," he continued. "The new policy on sexual misconduct, it's really not part of the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities, but it's a separate policy referenced in the Statement. Sexual misconduct doesn't apply to that [CSG] review."

What he said.

In September 1991, U-M's student government investigated an Ann Arbor Police Department tear gas incident; in January 1992 it looked at U-M's interim policy on discrimination and discriminatory harassment; and in 1997 it reviewed allegations of excessive force by U-M Department of Public Safety officers following a football game.

You know what all of those have in common? They aren't investigations of STUDENTS. You can review the records of officer so-and-so or review policies until you're blue in the face without running into FERPA. You can also review those records without any knowledge of the students involved. You can't, however, say, "HEY, GIVE US ALL OF THE GIBBONS RECORDS" and then pretend to redact the name of the only guy it could possibly be.

Proppe said student government has also reviewed past sexual misconduct investigations, although not recently.

I question this

[ED: Michael Proppe contacted me, and told  me that they do have a file of previous investigations. The difference is that the records have the names redacted. Once the records are identifiable as being Student X's record, they are protected. Props to Michael for the clarification. Get it? Props? Proppe? /Shrugs, leaves room.]

"We certainly disagree with the university's interpretation," Proppe said. "The university main concern is 'Was this going to violate the privacy of individuals involved?'

That's not the case, Proppe asserted, saying CSG intends to maintain student privacy and confidentiality.

Cool, but that really doesn't matter. Michigan can't tell the federal government "we know you said not to disclose this, but they promised they wouldn't tell anyone else." There is NO provision for these records to be disclosed to other entities if they pinkie-swear not to further disclose it.

Plus, you're selling this entire thing as "transparency." How can you say you're trying to make the investigation transparent while simultaneously declaring that you won't reveal anything?

CSG has commissioned a law firm to consider U-M's refusal to turn over investigation documents.

Hey, look, I just saved you a bunch of money.

Bottom line, there are a bunch of open questions for the University and the Athletic Department on this issue. But when people focus on the stuff that the University categorically cannot do, it distracts from the stuff onto which we actually SHOULD be trying to shine a light. And to say the University is somehow "obstructing" this student government investigation through the failure to turn over investigation records is, as they say, crap.

UPDATE: After a conversation with Clarence Beeks (who, frankly, seems like more of a Corporate/Securities Law expert (watch good movies, people)), I felt I should include the following info.

Because the statute does not define "school official", that definition is left to the University, and the University must give public notice of that definition. Michigan's definition is as follows:

A University official is any person employed by the University in an administrative, supervisory, academic, research, or support position; a person elected to the Board of Regents; a student or a University graduate serving on an official University committee or assisting another University official in performing his or her tasks; or a person employed by or under contract to, or serving as the agent of, the University to perform a specific task.

http://ro.umich.edu/ferpa/

The CSG is not an "official University committee," a list of which can be found here. It is, by its own description, a student organization. Its members are chosen by the student body, not the University, and it performs no designated University function. Further, the definition of "legitimate educational interest" is as follows: 

Legitimate educational interest is the need to review an education record in order for a University official to carry out his or her responsibilities in regard to performing an administrative task outlined in the official's duties, or performing a supervisory or instructional task directly related to the student's education.

(Emphasis mine). Even if we're somehow assuming students on CSG are officials, reviewing such cases is almost certainly not part of their outlined duties.

Comments

bluebyyou

March 1st, 2014 at 6:05 PM ^

I took con law some time ago, but remember enough that I wasn't suggesting that a university student wouldn't have certain constitutional rights restricted by his/her relationship with an institituion.

My point was that for a charge as serious as sexual assault, the burden of proof should be something other than preponderance of the evidence or, to put it bluntly, roll back the recent change that DOE required to be implemented.

As far as the Duke case goes, I'm not sure the comparison is valid as the players were exonerated.  With Gibbons, that may not be the case, even if he is innocent.

Section 1

February 27th, 2014 at 4:33 PM ^

My big question: Why does the Federal government allow the University to expel a student for essentially committing a "crime" for which he was never tried and convicted?

 

My big question: Did the federal government insist on something like expulsion, no matter whether a crime was charged or not?

No need to discuss politics on the MGoBoard here and now.  But rest assured that is where this is heading.

BlueCube

February 27th, 2014 at 5:55 PM ^

What concerns me is whether the threat of the government investigating may make the preponderence of the evidence standard even lower. It may be even more likely in a high profile case like this. This potential problem is made worse since the accused attorney is going to tell him not to talk to avoid providing evidence for any potential criminal proceedings. The scales are tilted dramatically towards expullsion.

LSA Superstar

February 27th, 2014 at 5:04 PM ^

I won't give you the answer from all angles because I'm not billing for this time.  But in short, the "Federal government allows the University to expel a student committing a 'crime' for which he was never tried and convicted" because the Federal government just may have required the University to adopt the disciplinary hearing standard of review used here.  The Campus SaVE Act, included as part of the VAWA reauthorization, requires schools to institute a hearing process.  Further, a proposed regulation that interprets the SaVE Act might just force schools to utilize that standard of review in the hearing process.  Schools that don't may be subject to Clery Act penalties.

I have no interest in a moral/political/normative debate but that's the descriptive legal landscape.  Stray from it at your peril.  If you want change, write your congressman or something.

CWoodson

February 27th, 2014 at 4:53 PM ^

This is right (as is the top post), and a lot of the "legal" commentary (including by the goofball who works at Michigan's Student Press Law Center) has been entirely incorrect about FERPA and its requirements.  No sane general counsel's office is going to suggest that you comment much more about this kind of stuff than Michigan has - the final results of the investigation have been literally disclosed, as Michigan acknowledged that Gibbons was expelled for violating the sexual conduct policy.

Thank you for saving me the trouble of doing this, my billable hours appreciate it.

Clarence Beeks

February 27th, 2014 at 9:20 PM ^

"No sane general counsel's office is going to suggest that you comment much more about this kind of stuff than Michigan has"

Except that the Fitzgerald quote on the OP does just that. None of that needed to be said. Absolutely nothing ever requires disclosure of education records, even if an exception applies, and no explanation for the decision is necessary.

Section 1

February 27th, 2014 at 4:42 PM ^

I approve.  Very nicely done.

Bring on this fight, I say.  I hope everybody sues everybody else.  Put this in court, where Gibbons' case should have been (or should not have been) from the beginning.

Next leak I am looking forward to; the transcript from the OSCR/OIE proceedings in Gibbons' case.  Of course, they should not be leaked.  Neither should Gibbon's letter have been leaked to The Michigan Daily.  Shit happens, I guess.

It was a leak (defense-side, I presume) of the transcript of proceedings in the Auburn case that led to James Taranto's explosive WSJ column.  The transcript revealed what a ludicrous kangaroo court those proceedings had been.  With Auburn's assigned hearing panelists stage-whispering questions about what they were supposed to do.  (A university librarian was the chairman of the panel.  The other members were two students, a Liberal Arts College staffer and a fisheries professor.)

The campus protesters seem to have no idea whatsoever where this is likely to go.

Let the lawsuits commence.

Section 1

February 27th, 2014 at 5:24 PM ^

Under explicit direction from Assistant Secretary Russlynn H. Ali in April of 2011, the University felt compelled to re-craft its policy.

And under what seems to be urgent pressure from that same Office of Civil Rights within the Department of Education, and in apparent response to a complaint from "the Washtenaw Watchdog," the University took further action after a lapse in time of about four years.

Law.  Ha ha.

LSA Superstar

February 27th, 2014 at 9:15 PM ^

Are you aware what happened in 2013 that, I dunno, might have led to the revision of the policy?

Look, dude, seriously - I think you have a pretty defensible position about how we're moving in a bad direction.  I won't agree or disagree.  But "haha law" doesn't really have integrity when Congress, you know, passes A LAW by, you know, voting on it.  That law explicitly requires universities to adopt DOE-OCR advisory policy as implemented in the 2011 Dear Colleagues letter.

Be mad if you want, but sometimes people pass laws we don't like.  Happened to me a bunch of times.  Happened to a LOT of people a bunch of times.

EDIT: To be clear, not all of the OCR's advisory policies are included in the Campus SaFE Act.  For more details, do your own research on Cornell's excellent online law library.

LSA Superstar

February 28th, 2014 at 9:29 AM ^

Are you aware that in March of 2013 Congress - yes, human Congress, not dog Congress, not bizzaro-congress, not shadow congress - passed the SaVE Act, which incorporated a great many of the Dear Colleague letter's provisions into law?  Are you aware that the DOE is involved in rulemaking to write regulations interpreting that Act?  Are you aware that these are the standards now in play?  Because that's how that works.

Again - I don't expect you to be aware of these things.  Only big time legislative nerds would be.  But perhaps it would alleviate some of your concern about the process and some of your disdain for law. 

Njia

February 28th, 2014 at 12:23 PM ^

I'm not an attorney, but I AM a consultant (different species, same genus) and I know how these things work.

Admit it: you cancelled the 3 o'clock after you read the article because "something just came up." Right?

:-)

coldnjl

February 27th, 2014 at 5:21 PM ^

Being both a current student and alumnus, I can't stand why our student body believes they are entitled to anything, from the demands listed here to the threat delivered by BBUM. Overall, I feel it is a rare trait for people to realize their self-worth and their place in the world. If you want change, go for it, but do it in ways that you have access to and realistic....Not just by making demands that you feel your entitled to. Just my opinion

FreddieMercuryHayes

February 27th, 2014 at 4:38 PM ^

University of Michigan Refuses to Violate Federal Laws!  News at 8!

Journalism and freedom of the press is one of the greatest freedoms this country enjoys, and serves the society as a whole.  But goddamn, why are some people just so terrible at it?

pescadero

February 28th, 2014 at 7:49 AM ^

Thomas Jefferson had his own newspaper editor on payroll to slander John Adams - claiming such wonderful things as he slept with is mother and was a British agent.

 

I don't think Jefferson had quite the view of journalism as you think he did.

Erik_in_Dayton

February 27th, 2014 at 4:39 PM ^

People need to imagine a world  in which the student government of SEC School X wants information on an investigation exactly like the one at issue because they believe a football player was wrongfully accused of sexual misconduct and wrongfully expelled because of that.  Now imagine that the student government of SEC School X wants the school's records about the investigation and cites a student statement of rights and responsibilities as grounds for asking for said records.  Next imagine that SEC School X says, "FERPA doesn't allow us to give out those records."  Would people describe SEC School X as obstructing or stonewalling the student government's investigation?  I find it hard to believe that they would. 

Section 1

February 27th, 2014 at 4:51 PM ^

Because we have Auburn, as I mentioned above.

People need to understand.  This isn't a "Football versus Academics" fight.  It's not a "B1G Discipline versus SEC Corruption" fight.  This is none of those things.

This is all about the current Department of Education Office of Civil Rights flexing its muscles.  Ordinarily, as a certifiably-pc institution, the University of Michigan would fall all over itself to comply.  That seems to have happened in this case, in fact.  It was the same in the Auburn case.

No; this fight is to see how far the federal government can push universities, and at what cost to those unversities.  Places like Michigan and Auburn might well say internally, Just do whatever they want.  Try to do it before they ask us to do it.  That's what the actions say.  And just maybe, compared to the federal dollars involved, any lawsuit(s) from a Joshua Strange, or a Brendan Gibbons, are mere afterthoughts.

So in this case, we are indistinguishable from the SEC.

Erik_in_Dayton

February 27th, 2014 at 5:00 PM ^

My SEC reference was just to conjure the image of a student government who wanted to protect a football team more than it wanted to stop sexual assaults. My points: FERPA doesn't distinguish between why it is that someone is requesting student information, so a school has to comply with it regardless of the requester's* motives, and it is accordingly unfair to describe a school as stonewalling even when they are denying information to well-intentioned people (who, for the sake of argument, I'm assuming the student governement is) so long as the school's refusal is accurately based on what FERPA does and does not require.  

 

*No, this is probably not a word.

Section 1

February 27th, 2014 at 5:14 PM ^

...the Auburn/Joshua Strange case was not a football case.  Josh was a 'civilian' student.  It might have been even more interesting, had they tried to do what they did to Josh, to Cam Newton.   

:-0

The only probable relevance of "football" in the Gibbons case, is that Gibbons' status as a football player prompted our ol' buddy Doug Smith to hound him (and the supposed victim, I gather) for the rest of his days in Ann Arbor.  Including Smith's personally filing a federal complaint with the OCR.

People will try to make this about "football," when football has almost nothing to do with it.

Gameboy

February 27th, 2014 at 4:42 PM ^

I think you are over reaching. FERPA does not limit release of ALL student related records. If that was true, the student advisory review code you referred to would be meaningless since according to your interpretation, you can't review anything. It is like arguing the university is violating FERPA by releasing enrollment numbers because that is derived from individual student records. There are facts to these cases that the university can release without violating FERPA, like when the investigation was triggered, who initiated the review, how the board decided to expel a student. There is no reason for university to put up a wall with no recourse.

BiSB

February 27th, 2014 at 4:46 PM ^

In terms of governing what educational records can be released by the University, the Review Code IS meaningless.

I'd also challenge your assertion that they can release the information you indicated. The only reason we found out about the Gibbons thing was because it was leaked.

Erik_in_Dayton

February 27th, 2014 at 4:48 PM ^

 

 

FERPA says this:

Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit an institution of postsecondary education from disclosing the final results of any disciplinary proceeding conducted by such institution against a student who is an alleged perpetrator of any crime of violence (as that term is defined in section 16of title 18), or a nonforcible sex offense, if the institution determines as a result of that disciplinary proceeding that the student committed a violation of the institution’s rules or policies with respect to such crime or offense. 

Was Gibbons an alleged perpetrator of a crime of violence per Sec. 16 Title 18? If so, what crime?  He was never charged.  Is U of M supposed to determine what crime(s) he would have been charged with had a case gone forward?  Can they rely on their own determination for FERPA purposes?

Further, what does it mean to violate an institutiion's rules or policies with respect to a crime of violence?  Michigan's student code does not explicitly incorporate that definition.  Gibbons seems to have been found guilty of violating the school's general "sexual misconduct" rule, but that did not require a finding of a "crime of violence."  Do they make a finding within the "sexual misconduct" finding, i.e., a more specific finding?

I don't post this to say that this situation does not fall into a FERPA exception but rather to say that it's a murky issue.  The wording of the law should be changed if Congress wants disclosure in these circumstances.  

 

 

Even if we believe the above exception applies, FERPA also  says this:

(C) For the purpose of this paragraph, the final results of any disciplinary proceeding-

(i) shall include only the name of the student, the violation committed, and any sanction imposed by the institution on that student; and

(ii) may include the name of any other student, such as a victim or witness, only with the written consent of that other student.  

Erik_in_Dayton

February 27th, 2014 at 5:13 PM ^

Because of the letter being public, here's how I imagine a discussion between U of M and its laywers going:

Michigan: Persons A, B, and C want us to release these records.

Lawyer: Do you want to release the records?

Michigan:  Eh, it might get people off of our backs.

Lawyer:  Well, it's questionable that you can release anything. At most you can release a very limited amount of information, and that information is already public.  You'll be perceived in all likelihood as stonewalling if you just release what's already public, which again is all you can release.  There's no penalty for not releasing the information, whereas you could lose federal financial aid if you did, so don't do it. 

Yeoman

February 27th, 2014 at 7:06 PM ^

They can release enrollment numbers because they don't include any identifiable information about any particular student.

They can't release information about the Gibbons case because there's no way to redact the information to protect his identity. IT CAN"T BE ANYONE ELSE.

Aggregate statistics are a different animal. They could, arguably, release information about their treatment of sexual misconduct cases generally, if they could find a way to do so without revealing any particular student's identity. But they cannot respond to questions regarding a specific case, and that's what they're being asked to do.

MadMatt

February 27th, 2014 at 5:18 PM ^

Two thoughts:

First, the issue the post put on the table is whether a review of the Gibbons case by the Student Government is legal or helpful.  I'm convinced by the argument that it is not legal, but let me ask the question, even if it is legal, what exactly will a review by the Student Government achieve?  If they look it over and say everything was kosher, will anyone outside the University be more inclined to believe it because the Student Govenment says so?  If they look it over and tell the University the process was all jacked up, does the fact the Student Government says so make it any more likely the University will make constructive changes in response?  I think the answers are pretty obvious.  So, I have to wonder why Mr. Proppe is trying to insert himself into the process.  Is this really just about ego and trying to be a big-shot?

Second, I don't understand why various members of the community want to reargue whether Mr. Gibbons committed an offense and whether he should have been expelled.  Haven't we beat this dead horse enough?  Yeah, he was not charged with a crime; so what?  Let me toss you a hypothetical: you are on the Board of Supervisors for a private high school.  A sophmore reports to school officials that a senior cornered her in a stair well and felt her up in a threatening manner.  Her report is plausible, but for a variety of reasons the local DA choses not to bring criminal charges.  Are you telling me you don't think the school should consider whether they want to have the senior still attending classes at the school because he was never charged criminally?

GoBluePhil

February 27th, 2014 at 5:23 PM ^

I'll cut it short. She said. He said. No evidence. Unwilling victim. A preponderance of evidence of 51 percent. Gibbons found responsible. Letter to Gibbons to expel. Over. FERPA guidelines adhered to. But there are still people who think it's their business. NOT.

Clarence Beeks

February 27th, 2014 at 5:46 PM ^

Sorry, but you're wrong. The "school officials" exception definitely allows for disclosure to students serving on committees if there is a legitimate educational interest (the last part is the key here). The only catch is that the school has to include notice of disclosure to those groups in its annual notice to students (which is both typical and likely, given the claim of prior disclosures to review other cases). That said, that just means the University can disclose it to them; they certainly aren't compelled to do so, and the University alone has the authority to make the determination that there isn't a legitimate educational interest in the request. What the University is really claiming is that there is no legitimate educational interest in the request. Think about that for a minute.

Clarence Beeks

February 27th, 2014 at 7:21 PM ^

It's the prevailing interpretation of 34 CFR 99.31(a)(1), to the point that it's stated right in the DOE FPCO model notice: "A school official is ... a student serving on an official committee, such as a disciplinary or grievance committee."

At the end of the day, though, even though the exception (almost certainly - assuming the University does not have some ridiculously narrow FERPA disclosure, which is unlikely) applies, the University still does not have to disclose. They can still go tell them to go pound sand, for any reason or no reason at all. The response that is quoted hides behind an incorrect interpretation of the "school officials" exception, which can only be reconciled on a claim that the student government has no legitimate educational interest, which is an extremely disturbing claim given the nature of this case. It makes it appear that the judgment may have been that an incorrect claim regarding the exception was "safer" than the PR hit that would have come from exercising their legal right to refuse to disclose.