Lighten Up Bro wrote:
The tough guy brigade needs to slow their roll. It appears that she spilled/tossed coffee on a football player suspected of sexually assaulting her teammate. Six months go by with no disciplinary hearing or action being taken over the coffee incident. Out of the blue and on the last day that a disciplinary action can be filed, the university e-mails her after hours that she may lose her scholarship and be expelled from one of the finest institutions on the planet. She is blindsided, panics, and, without the ability to speak to a counselor or to someone to explain the charges and process, she spirals and kills herself.
Stanford’s actions were low class and callously casual for such an important potential action. We also don’t know much about the young woman and her mental health leading up to this. It is inappropriate and cruel to label her weak or to fault her family for filing a suit. The court will decide the matter.
In a statement to CNN, Stanford University spokesperson Dee Mostofi refuted the lawsuit’s claims.
“The Stanford community continues to grieve Katie’s tragic death and we sympathize with her family for the unimaginable pain that Katie’s passing has caused them,” Mostofi wrote.
“However, we strongly disagree with any assertion that the university is responsible for her death. While we have not yet seen the formal complaint brought by the Meyer family, we are aware of some of the allegations made in the filing, which are false and misleading,” Mostofi added.
According to Mostofi, the university spokesperson, the letter to Meyer also contained “a number to call for immediate support and was specifically told that this resource was available to her 24 hours a day, seven days a week.”
“It is important to emphasize that we are committed to supporting students through the student judicial process under OCS, and we did so in this case. In particular, the university offered Katie an advisor to work with her throughout the process and told her she could have a support person of her choosing with her in any meeting or conversation with OCS,” Mostofi added.
Noting that Meyer had no prior history of mental illness, the lawsuit further details plans she had made in the days before her death, including purchasing plane tickets, planning a birthday party and attending class and soccer practice as normal.
