[112] The Columbia report stated that "At Rolling Stone, every story is assigned to a fact-checker. "Under the scenario cited by Erdely", Wemple wrote, "the Phi Kappa Psi members are not just criminal sexual-assault offenders, they're criminal sexual-assault conspiracists, planners, long-range schemers. [68], On October 24, 2016, in a video deposition, Jackie said, "I stand by the account I gave Rolling Stone. Some students "actually had to leave the room while they were reading [the article] because they were so upset." A stone-cold sober coed named Jackie is lured by her date " Drew" to an upstairs room at the fraternity house. [33][72][73] Natasha Vargas-Cooper, a columnist at The Intercept, said that Erdely's decision not to interview the accused fraternity members showed "a horrendous, hidden bias the premise that none of these guys would tell the truth if asked", while a staff editorial in The Wall Street Journal charged that "Ms. Erdely did not construct a story based on facts, but went looking for facts to fit her theory. [164] The lawsuit was settled on April 11, 2017. NPR's Scott Simon talks to Lydia Teasley of the Negro Leagues Family Alliance about honoring baseball's past and her father Ron "Schoolboy" Teasley about his own history in the Negro Leagues. "[120], In response to these statements, Megan McArdle wrote in Bloomberg View, "Rolling Stone can't even apologize right. Father of girl at center of UVA 'gang rape' storm defends her saying In today's 24-hour news cycle, we all have a tendency to rush to judgment without having all of the facts in front of us. The collateral damage included a UVa dean, as well as the entire Greek system there and, well, no one thinks a lot of Teresa Sullivan anymore either. [65] The Columbia Journalism Review called the apology "a grudging act of contrition". Disgraced former Rolling Stone reporter Sabrina Erdely admitted in the company's defamation trial that she failed to speak to critical figures in her story about a gang rape at the University of Virginia (UVA), who could have exposed key source Jackie Coakley as a fantastic liar, according to reports. It was absurd. [113] The Columbia Journalism Review called the story "this year's media-fail sweepstakes". [57] A subsequent tweet sent by Rolling Stone managing editor Will Dana offered further comment on Erdely's story: "[W]e made a judgementthe kind of judgement reporters and editors make every day. "[94], On December 8, 2014, ABC News reported that the person quoted by Erdely as alleging a rape at Phi Kappa Psi had retained an attorney. She said her initial reaction was surprise and "a certain air of disbelief" because during her 44-minute interview for the story, Erdely never brought up Jackie or asked about any of the allegations made in the article. Police said that three months after reporting she was raped by two football players in a bathroom at a party, she admitted to the same motivation that drove Jackie. It has since been reported that Jackie may have invented portions of the story in an unsuccessful attempt to win the affections of a fellow student in whom she had a romantic interest. [26] A few hours after the incident, several news groups received an anonymous letter claiming responsibility for the vandalism and demanding that the university implement harsher consequences for sexual assault (mandatory expulsion), conduct a review of all fraternities on campus, the resignation of Nicole Eramo, and the implementation of harm reduction policies at fraternity parties. [171], Street artist Sabo papered Hollywood with posters styled like a Rolling Stone cover featuring the headline "Rape Fantasies and Why We Perpetuate Them". "[79], On December 6, The Washington Post's media critic Erik Wemple called for all Rolling Stone staff who were involved with the story to be fired. It's been over a year since Rolling Stone's big story on an alleged gang rape at the University of Virginia was exposed as a hoax, but the public has long lacked specific details about how UVA student Jackie Coakley concocted her wildly false story. So it took me a day or two to admit that I found many of Erdely's details unrecognizable. [13][14] The UVA student, identified only as "Jackie" by the magazine, had been taken to a party by a fellow student, hosted at UVA's Phi Kappa Psi fraternity during 2012. [111] On April 5, 2015, Columbia's 12,000-word review of "A Rape on Campus" was published on both Rolling Stone's and the journalism school's websites. "[113] Assistant editor Elisabeth Garber-Paul provided fact-checking. On November 19, 2014, Rolling Stone published the now retracted article by Sabrina Erdely titled "A Rape on Campus" about an alleged gang rape of a University of Virginia (UVA) student, Jackie Coakley. At the end of the day, UVA's incredible story fit Erdely's narrative better than Vanderbilt's credible one. In May 2013, Jackie reported the sexual assault to dean and head of UVA's Sexual Misconduct Board, Nicole Eramo, who, according to a recap in New York magazine, offered three options: "file a criminal complaint with the police, file a complaint with the school, or face her attackers with Eramo present to tell them how she feels". Prior to the date, they attempted to locate him in a student directory and were unable to find evidence that he existed. New evidence submitted in an ongoing lawsuit against Rolling Stone suggest that the legal team of Jackie Coakley, the University of Virginia (UVA) student responsible for a massive gang rape hoax, has been withholding evidence from an ongoing lawsuit. After both the Charlottesville Police press conference and Columbia University's investigative report, UVA President Teresa Sullivan released the following statement: Rolling Stone's story, 'A Rape on Campus', did nothing to combat sexual violence, and it damaged serious efforts to address the issue. [140], Due to increased social skepticism about the prevalence of sexual assault created by the unraveling of Erdely's Rolling Stone report, the Military Justice Improvement Act would be "much harder" to enact, according to Margaret Carlson,[141] and ultimately did not pass in that congressional session. [18][40][41] Sandra Menendez, a student who claimed to have been interviewed by Erdely but who was not directly quoted in the article, told CNN that she and others became uncomfortable after speaking with Erdely, concluding she had "an agenda". Although the discussion was lengthy, the reporter elected not to include any of the information from the interview in her article. president admits rape story was false; keeps restrictions on fraternities", "U.Va. Rolling Stone was hardly innocent, but this whole episode cost them whatever reputation remained. [48], Per records released by Yahoo under subpoena in 2016, Haven Monahan's e-mail account was created from inside the University of Virginia "only one day before that same account sent an email to Jackie's friend Ryan Duffin" in 2012. Jackie's friends in the story have provided evidence since then that the man Rolling Stone calls "Drew" was electronically introduced to them as "Haven Monahan. "[91], Within days following the unraveling of the Rolling Stone story, the North American Interfraternity Conference, the National Panhellenic Council, and the Fraternity and Sorority Political Action Committee demanded that the University of Virginia "immediately reinstate operations for all fraternity and sorority organizations on campus" and issue an apology to Greek students. Sullivan said: "I was plainly not prepared for what the story looked like. I offer our community's genuine gratitude for their devotion and perseverance in their service. In fact, her failure to speak to the three friends in whom Jackie supposedly confided immediately after the alleged incident was perhaps the most egregious of a string of journalistic failures. Now, that's no longer the case. to see all of them, at. They came to the conclusion that they were comfortable" with not making it clear to readers that they had never contacted Ryan. Sorority Women Say", "Rolling Stone may have crushed anti-rape bill", "Rolling Stone threw a rape victim to the misogynist horde", "Greek leaders go on the offensive at UVA", "Campus sexual assault under fresh scrutiny after new survey shows lower incidence: News", "Sex crimes on campus: Professors as judges", "The new panic: campus sex assaults Opinion", "Charlottesville police make clear that Rolling Stone story is a complete crock", "Civil, Criminal Lawsuits: Possible Outcomes of, "Former UVA Fraternity Member Hires Lawyer Who Specializes in Sex Assault Cases", "The year in media errors and corrections 2014", "U-Va. Dean Sues Rolling Stone for 'False' Portrayal in Retracted Rape Story", "Attorneys for 'Jackie' in Rolling Stone Lawsuit Protest Under-Oath Deposition, Say It Could 'Re-Traumatize' Her", "Former U-va. Student 'Jackie' to Sit for Deposition in Rolling Stone Lawsuit", "Jury says Rolling Stone article defamed UVa administrator | Local", "Rolling Stone trial: Jury finds magazine liable for defamation for discredited rape story Nov. 4, 2016", "In Rolling Stone Defamation Case, Magazine and Reporter Ordered to Pay $3 Million", "U-Va. . Real Name Of UVA Rape Accuser: Jackie Coakley | Luke Ford 2) She just made it a million times harder for real rape victims to come forward because people are less likely to believe them. UVA Jackie May Have Just Been Caught In Another Big Lie [71], The Washington Post journalist Erik Wemple criticized the story's graphic details of the alleged crime and said that it was hard to believe due to the "diabolical" description. "[126][127], Phi Kappa Psi's national headquarters released the following statement: "That Rolling Stone sought to turn fiction into fact is shamefulThe discredited article has done significant damage to the ability of the chapter's members to succeed in their educational pursuits and besmirched the character of undergraduate students at the University of Virginia who did not deserve the spotlight of the media." The Post did report, however, that Jackie appeared distraught after the rape allegedly took place. That's terrible for journalism", "Should there have been firings at Rolling Stone? Well, she is married and is now "Jackie McGovern", living her life, la-la-la, scot-free despite being the central figure in a mammoth fraud that has cost people their jobs, institutions their reputations, and a magazine a spitload of money. [124], After the Charlottesville Police concluded that there was no evidence of a crime having occurred at Phi Kappa Psi during their press conference on March 23, 2015, Stephen Scipione, the president of Phi Kappa Psi's UVA chapter, announced that his fraternity is "exploring its legal options to address the extensive damage caused by Rolling Stone". [168] On June 13, 2017, the lawsuit was settled for $1.65 million. He wrote:[87]. Tim Coakley Jazz Show; Vox Pop; . Both of those peoplewho attend different colleges and bear no resemblance to the description Jackie gave of her attackersaid in interviews that they knew of Jackie but did not know her well and did not have contact with her after she left for the University of Virginia. "[116] "[132], According to the Columbia report, "Allen W. Groves, the University dean of students, and Nicole Eramo, an assistant dean of students, separately wrote to the authors of this report that the story's account of their actions was inaccurate." [83] Christina Hoff Sommers, being interviewed by John Stossel for Reason, commented that the story "proved to be a sort of gothic fantasy, a male-demonizing fantasy. Rolling Stone falsely accused some University of Virginia students of heinous, criminal acts, and falsely depicted others as indifferent to the suffering of their classmate. A former student who graduated in 2013 said "the day [the article] came out was the most emotionally grueling of my life. CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. A federal jury on Monday ordered Rolling Stone and one of its writers to pay $3 million in damages to a University of Virginia administrator over a discredited article two years ago about a supposed gang rape at the university. There's a new piece (usually three) from Bob every weekday here on Substack. Eramo was awarded $3 million by a jury who concluded that Rolling Stone defamed her with actual malice,[11] and Rolling Stone settled the lawsuit with the fraternity for $1.65 million. "[58] On December 6, Rolling Stone updated the apology to say the mistakes in the article were the fault of Rolling Stone and not of its source, while noting that "there now appear to be discrepancies in Jackie's account". The three friends disclosed to ABC News their actual names Alex Stock's pseudonym was "Andy", Kathryn Hendley's was "Cindy", Ryan (Duffin) was "Randall"[100] and went on record that on the night of the alleged event Jackie told the two men that she was forced to fellate five men while a sixth stood by. It's hard to imagine a more flagrant violation of the UVA Honor Code than Jackie Coakley's slanderous hoax that she repeatedly perpetuated from age 18 through 20. The student at the heart of Rolling Stone 's discredited gang-rape story has been ordered by a federal judge to turn over her communications. If this allegation alone hadn't triggered an all-out scramble at Rolling Stone for more corroboration, nothing would have. Haven claims he doesn't know. [170] The lawsuit was settled on December 21, 2017. Teresa Sullivan, the president of UVa, promptly shut down all the fraternities and, bizarrely, the sororities as well (don't ask), in a "ready, fire, aim" response, without allowing even the Phi Psis the due process to point out all the inaccuracies that made the article suspect.Ultimately, Rolling Stone got sued, paid out a big settlement to get out from under their own stupidity, and took a big black eye as far as journalistic competence. In the post, he asked: "Is Vanderbilt just not as sexy a story as UVA? There is certainly a good argument to make that it is often necessary to prosecute as a deterrent to the next person willing to try the same felonious act. "[150], The Washington Post media critic Erik Wemple stated that everyone connected to this story at Rolling Stone should be fired. Are you. The revelations comes in a court filing made Friday by by attorneys representing UVA dean Nicole Eramo. We all remember the tumult at the University of Virginia five years back. [27] A student quoted in The Daily Progress said that men at a nearby bar were "quick to yell 'insults and slurs' at the protesters as they walked by". ONLY FOR REPUBLICANS. But I have a pretty good notion that she violated some serious criminal statutes; after all, participating in a fraud involving the mails (a magazine) or wire (somewhere along the line) is a Federal issue. An attorney for Phi Psi said Monday they're seeking a " broader area of inquiry " than what was requested by Eramo, and a judge has again ruled that Jackie must comply with a subpoena to turn over documents relating to the caseJackie's claims about a gang rape fell apart once it was discovered that the man she allegedly had a date with on that ", to become a weapon of revenge. Circuit Court filed November 9, 2015), Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, North American Interfraternity Conference, Fraternity and Sorority Political Action Committee, "Rolling Stone and UVA: The Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism Report", "Rolling Stone Faces Millions More In Defamation Charges", "Fake News: Postmodernism By Another Name", "Dan Liljenquist: News stories about fake news stories", "Rolling Stone, Sabrina Rubin Erdely deemed liable in dean's defamation suit for University of Virginia rape story", "Lawyers in Rolling Stone lawsuit file new evidence that 'Jackie' created fake persona", "How the Retracted Rolling Stone Article 'A Rape on Campus' Came to Print", "Rolling Stone's investigation: 'A failure that was avoidable', "UVA dean awarded $3M in Rolling Stone magazine case", "Rolling Stone Settles Last Remaining Lawsuit Over UVA Rape Story", "The Misguided Idea Of The War Over Campus Sexual Assault", "A Rape on Campus: A Brutal Assault and Struggle for Justice at UVA", "Everything We Know About the UVA Rape Case [Updated]", "Key elements of Rolling Stone's U-Va gang rape allegations in doubt", "Sabrina Rubin Erdely, woman behind Rolling Stone's explosive U-Va alleged rape story", "UVA's Sullivan reflects on tenure, Rolling Stone controversy, student privacy laws", "Rolling Stone never asked U-Va. about specific gang rape allegations, according to newly released e-mails and audio recording", "Students claiming responsibility for Phi Kappa Psi vandalism submit anonymous letter", "U-Va president suspends fraternities until Jan. 9 in wake of rape allegations", "Protest outside Phi Kappa Psi house leads to four arrests", "Hundreds protest at UVA; student says memorial to victims vandalized", "The Governing Board of the Inter-Fraternity Council at UVA", "Author of Rolling Stone article on alleged U-Va. rape didn't contact accused assailants for her report", "Rolling Stone whiffs in reporting on alleged rape", "McAuliffe urges investigation at U-Va. after, "Official Statement from the Virginia Alpha Chapter of Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity at the University of Virginia", "Magazine's Account of Gang Rape on Virginia Campus Comes Under Scrutiny", "Rolling Stone Tries to Regroup After Campus Rape Article is Disputed", "Updated apology digs bigger hole for Rolling Stone", "U-Va. remains resolved to address sexual violence as, "There's More Bizarre Evidence That UVA Student Jackie's Alleged Rapist Doesn't Exist", "Friends' accounts differ from victim in UVA rape story CNN.com", "More problems with the Rolling Stone piece", "U-Va. students challenge Rolling Stone account of alleged sexual assault", "U.Va.
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