Madeline Wilson has been raising eyebrows at St. Olaf College with her T-shirt: "Ask me how my college is protecting my rapist."
Wilson, a 22-year-old nursing student, says she was raped by another student in a dorm last May. She blames the school for clearing him in a campus investigation that she believes was deeply flawed; and now she's going public with her frustration.
"I didn't want anyone else to go through the same thing," Wilson said this week. She created a website to publicize her story.
The private college in Northfield insists that it's doing its best to crack down on sexual assault, but in the wake of Wilson's campaign, it is asking the federal government to review how the college handles those complaints.
"We do the best job we know how to in this challenging area," college President David Anderson wrote in a campus e-mail on Saturday. But, he acknowledged, "no process is perfect." A closed meeting Wednesday night between students and administrators was expected to focus on sexual assault and harassment on campus.
The case, which is getting national attention, is the most visible example in Minnesota of the growing national debate over sexual assault on campus. Across the country, colleges and universities — which are required by law to investigate such incidents — are finding themselves criticized by both sides — either for going too easy on perpetrators, or for running roughshod over the rights of the accused.
In February, a male student sued Macalester College after it launched a sexual assault investigation against him, claiming that the process "lacks even the most rudimentary due process protections for the accused." Macalester denied the charges. The student dropped the lawsuit, and quit college a month later.
At St. Olaf, Wilson argues that the college should have done more to protect her from the man she calls the perpetrator. St. Olaf officials won't comment about Wilson's case specifically. But her own account illustrates the dilemma colleges face as they try to sort through the sometimes murky details when one student accuses another of sexual misconduct.