Former University of British Columbia professor Steven Galloway is tired of people calling him a rapist.

The professor’s life was radically changed and his reputation tarnished when a woman accused him a sexual assault in the fall of 2015.  He was suspended, then fired, when the university claimed there were serious allegations of sexual assault and harassment against him… even though a report effectively cleared him of the assault.

The National Post has the story:

Former B.C. Supreme Court judge Mary Ellen Boyd wrote that report, and said she could substantiate none of the allegations against the celebrated author and former chair of UBC’s creative writing program — except, perhaps, that he’d erred by having a consensual affair with the woman… Even using the lower civil standard of “on a balance of probabilities” — the criminal one, “beyond a reasonable doubt,” is much tougher — the retired judge said of one purported assault that she couldn’t conclude it had occurred when alleged “or at all.”

In virtually every instance, Boyd found Galloway more credible than his accusers.

And so, he decided to sue his accuser (Caralea Cole, a 48-year-old artist and former faculty member in UBC’s creative writing program), two other professors (Keith Maillard and Annabel Lyon), and several students who “recklessly repeated” the allegations on social media. More than 20 are named in the lawsuit.

You’d think that the judge’s report would silence critics, but it has not:

Since Boyd issued her report in April of 2016, Galloway also has won several arbitration awards against UBC for its handling of the entire matter — most recently the university was found to have breached the confidentiality provisions of the first award he won, totalling more than $240,000.

Yet according to the statement of claim, it would seem that neither the judge’s findings nor the arbitrator’s decisions have served as any sort of deterrent to Galloway’s critics.

Here’s the kicker:

Collectively, the allegations serve as a harsh reminder that for the online mob, judicial and quasi-judicial findings, like verdicts in criminal trials, don’t count.

Exactly.  We’ve seen that in our own nation, haven’t we?  I hope this former professor wins big against these people who so carelessly sacrificed this man’s job.

It’s time for true justice for victims of sexual assault and victims of false sexual accusers.  You can’t really have one without the other.

Hat Tip: The National Post

Image Credit: By Dllu [CC BY-SA 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0)], from Wikimedia Commons 

About The Author

Mark was a co-founder of the Tea Party Patriots, and served as the national coordinator. He left the organization to work more broadly on expanding the self-governance movement beyond the partisan divide. Mark appears regularly on television in outlets as diverse as MSNBC, ABC, NBC, Fox News, CNN, Bloomberg, Fox Business and the BBC. He’s highly sought after for the tea party perspective from print and electronic media outlets, from the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, L.A. Times, Washington Examiner, Politico and the The Hill. Mark blogs at MarkMeckler.com, and his opinion editorials regularly run in many of the leading political newspapers both on and offline. Mark has a BA in English from San Diego State University and graduated with honors from University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law in 1988. He practiced real estate and business law for almost a decade. For the last eleven years of his legal career he specialized in Internet advertising law. When not fighting for the future of our nation, Mark is an avid horseman, and lives in rural northern California with his wife Patty and two children.

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