UCSB Chancellor Henry T. Yang |
In the meantime, Kurin has sued me for defamation, demanding $10 million in damages, for my truthful and accurate reporting about her long history of misconduct--which includes a 2016 Title IX finding that she had retaliated against students who reported sexual harassment by Gomez at her 2015 field school (Kurin later married Gomez and only recently divorced him.)
Tonight, Student No. 3 has written to the Chancellor of UCSB, Henry T. Yang, about the university's failures to protect students. I am reproducing her letter below, with her name redacted, as she wishes to protect her identity. However, she has identified herself to Chancellor Yang, so he knows well that she is a real person and is standing by her statements.
I want to make clear that I had nothing to do with the composition of this letter, nor Student No. 3's decision to write it, even if she utilizes some of my reporting in it (without journalism, few if any would know the truth about Kurin's misconduct and the university's failure to stop it, even allowing her to put students in danger again after the events of 2015 and 2016.)
I will keep readers updated on the response Student No. 3 gets from the Chancellor and what further action, if any, the university takes in this matter.
Dear Chancellor Yang,
My name is ___________ and I was recently involved in a Title IX
case involving UCSB Professor Danielle Kurin. You may know her personally, you
may not. However, as Chancellor, you should be aware that she has already been
involved in a 2016 Title IX case in which she was found guilty for retaliating
against a student who was assaulted by her now ex-husband. Even with the cases
put forth, she is up for tenure in September 2020.
In the summer of 2018, I attended a field school in Peru headed by
Professor Kurin and ran through the company IFR. The weekend before we all left
Peru to return home, Danielle’s ex-husband sexually assaulted me. Danielle
proceeded to handle the matter abhorrently. She blamed me and never
apologized for what happened to me under her care. I will not take the time in
this letter to explain more about the incident itself. You can do the research,
I am not the first woman this has happened to.
When I came forward with my story about what happened the night I
was assaulted, I had a lot of support and evidence. Surely, I thought, with a
Title IX case already on her record and now this, that’s enough for some action
to be taken to ensure the safety of current and future UCSB students. After
weeks of waiting to hear back, I got a call explaining that no action would be
taken because the incident occurred in a program not run by UCSB, although run
by a UCSB professor. I was told that Kurin would face no repercussions for the
part she played in my assault and the general misconduct she engaged in because
of jurisdictional issues. Perhaps, your TItle IX office has prematurely decided
to enact the new regulations that Education Secretary Betsy DeVos approved
which excludes most cases of sexual assault that occur off-campus. Let me
remind you, those do not go into effect until August 14th, and until then it is
your responsibility to hold your professors accountable for their misconduct,
even if it occurred off-campus. So it seems UCSB has been overhasty in using
‘jurisdiction’ as an excuse to dismiss this case because that’s all it is… an
excuse. It’s an excuse not to take responsibility and an excuse to turn the
other cheek because that’s easier. I am so tired of this kind of response. It’s
outdated and archaic and I expected more accountability and transparency from
UCSB. I am asking you, Chancellor, to stop looking for excuses not to listen to
the voices of victims of sexual assault, and to reconcile what has happened.
This experience deterred me from attending other archaeological
field schools. It has left me feeling unsafe in the field that I am most
passionate about. The dismissal of my case, and consequently the dismissal of
my assault, has made me feel unsupported and unsafe in a university setting.
Ultimately, leading me to question whether to continue onto grad school. I do
not feel inclined to continue putting time and money into Institutions that do
not have the students’ best interest at heart.
Chancellor Yang, this is your call to action. Be a part of a
positive change in the system that has for so long protected abusers and the
powerful and privileged.
Update July 31, 2020: For those who want to write to Chancellor Yang
Chancellor Henry Yang
Office of the Chancellor 5221 Cheadle Hall Santa Barbara, CA 93106 Mailcode: 2030 henry.yang@ucsb.edu
Update August 13, 2020: Sexual assault victim Student No. 3 tells me this morning that she has received no response whatsoever from Chancellor Yang, nor from anyone on his staff.
Update July 31, 2020: For those who want to write to Chancellor Yang
Chancellor Henry Yang
Office of the Chancellor 5221 Cheadle Hall Santa Barbara, CA 93106 Mailcode: 2030 henry.yang@ucsb.edu
Update August 13, 2020: Sexual assault victim Student No. 3 tells me this morning that she has received no response whatsoever from Chancellor Yang, nor from anyone on his staff.
Update January 7, 2021: As of this date, Student No. 3 has yet to receive any response from Yang or the university.
13 Comments
As a former UCSB Anthro grad student, I am disgusted at the state of leadership of the Anthropology Dept and administration. Kurin should have been fired after the 2016 Title IX findings. Instead, she was given three years of paid leave and allowed to continue her field school, resulting in additional students being assaulted and harassed. UCSB's inability to act decisively and their silence has imperiled their students.
I echo those who've said that Kurin is a danger to students. She should not get tenure at UCSB and indeed should never be put in a position where she is responsible for students' welfare ever again.
The UCSB administration needs to have a moral reckoning and recognize that the safety of their students is more important than covering themselves legally. I agree with the student who states that punting on a Title IX jurisdictional loophole that hasn't even gone into effect is disgraceful.
I wish this student the best of everything in her life and future career, whether it is in Anthro or elsewhere. She has more integrity in her little finger than the whole lot of them combined. Thank you too, Michael Balter, for your excellent reporting over the past months.
Generally, I do believe that UCSB does a good job of educating students about sexual harassment through the required online courses, as well as department-sponsored seminars and webinars. Recently, a group of graduate students put together a training program for preventing sexual harassment in the field, and a faculty member and some graduate students published papers on sexual harassment.
All of this awareness training has done absolutely nothing for the students who are affected by these issues. How can faculty members and mentors guide students to the right resources when there are these loopholes? How can we create change in the discipline when there is no open communication?
I feel bad for the students that had such an awful field and life experience. I hope that Danielle Kurin takes responsibility for her actions! I believe that with more accurate reporting and attention to this issue, some change can come about.
Ultimately this brave student’s plea extends beyond the individual experience. Female students elsewhere will hear about the case and how the institutions have failed to protect her and punish the culprits, and will be deterred to go into archaeology. This may be of small consequence to Chancellor Yang, but perhaps more faculty at UCSB Anthro should give a damn and pressure from within.
http://michael-balter.blogspot.com/2020/05/peter-rathjen-serial-sexual-predator.html
https://www.ktva.com/story/40180592/title-ix-investigation-reveals-decades-of-sexual-misconduct-by-former-uaa-professor
Student No. 3 is not a student at UCSB. Wendrich and the IFR have not responded to questions about whether they contacted the Title IX office at UCSB after this sexual assault was reported to them. I would invite interested parties to contact them and ask.
Prospective students to Ireland and elsewhere, do yourself a huge favor and read the above letter from a student who was sexually assaulted at an IFR field school in Peru. If you do not want to find yourself in a position where you’ll one day have to compose such a letter to YOUR Chancellor, you should demand that IFR explain what they plan to improve in order to protect you and prevent more harassment and assault in the field.
You can find more details here:
http://michael-balter.blogspot.com/2020/06/a-ucla-town-hall-on-meto-and-related.html
And especially in the comment from June 20, 2020 at 5:52 PM