What is Sexual Misconduct?
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For students (complainants and respondents)
- Regulatory Prohibited Conduct:Occurred on or after 8/14/20;
- Alleged to have occurred in the United States;
- Conduct is alleged to have occurred in the University’s Education Program or Activity, and
- The alleged conduct, if true, would constitute Regulatory Prohibited Conduct as defined in this Policy.
Includes violations of Regulatory Quid Pro Quo or Hostile Environment Sexual Harassment, Regulatory Dating Violence, Regulatory Domestic Violence, Regulatory Sexual Assault and Regulatory Stalking.
- Nonregulatory Conduct:
- Occurred on or off campus
- No time limitation
Includes Sexual Assault, Dating Violence, Domestic Violence, Stalking, Sexual Exploitation, Non-Regulatory Quid Pro Quo Sexual Harassment and Non-Regulatory Hostile Environment Harassment.
For employees as respondents
- Regulatory Conduct:
- Occurred on or after 8/14/20;
- Alleged to have occurred in the United States;
- Conduct is alleged to have occurred in the University’s Education Program and Activity, and
- The alleged conduct, if true, would constitute Regulatory Prohibited Conduct as defined in this Policy.
Includes violations of Regulatory Quid Pro Quo or Hostile Environment Sexual Harassment, Regulatory Dating Violence, Regulatory Domestic Violence, Regulatory Sexual Assault and Regulatory Stalking.
- Nonregulatory Conduct:
- Conduct that occurred on or off campus
- No time limitation
Definitions
Sexual Harassment
- Regulatory Quid Pro Quo Sexual Harassment - An Employee conditioning the provision of aid, benefit or service of the University on an individual’s participation in unwelcome sexual conduct.
- Non-Regulatory Quid Pro Quo Sexual Harassment - An Official, Volunteer or Student conditioning the provision of aid, benefit or service of the University on the individual’s participation in unwelcome sexual conduct.
- Regulatory Hostile Environment Sexual Harassment - Unwelcome conduct, on the basis of sex, that a reasonable person would determine is so severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive that it effectively denies a person equal access to the University’s Education Program or Activity.
- Non-Regulatory Hostile Environment Sexual Harassment - Unwelcome conduct, on the basis of sex, that a reasonable person would determine is sufficiently severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive that it unreasonably interferes with, limits, or deprives an individual from participating in or benefitting from any educational, employment, social or residential program in offered connection with the University.
Sexual Assault
- Sexual Penetration Without Consent - Any penetration of the mouth, sex organs, or anus of another person, however slight by an object or any part of the body, when Consent is not present. This includes performing oral sex on another person when Consent is not present.
- Sexual Contact Without Consent - Knowingly touching or fondling a person’s genitals, breasts, buttocks, or anus, or knowingly touching a person with one’s own genitals or breasts, when Consent is not present. This includes contact done directly or indirectly through clothing, bodily fluids, or with an object. It also includes causing or inducing a person, when Consent is not present, to similarly touch or fondle oneself or someone else.
- Statutory Sexual Assault – The age of consent for sexual activity in Pennsylvania is 16. Minors under the age of 13 cannot consent to sexual activity. Minors aged 13-15 years old cannot consent to sexual activity with anyone who is 4 or more years older than they are at the time of the activity. Minors aged 16 years of age or older can legally consent to sexual activity, as long as the other person does not have authority over them as defined in Pennsylvania’s institutional sexual assault statute.
Sexual Exploitation
- Sexual voyeurism or permitting others to witness or observe the sexual or intimate activity of another person without that person’s Consent;
- Indecent exposure or inducing others to expose private or intimate parts of the body when Consent is not present;
- Recording or distributing information, images or recordings of any person engaged in sexual or intimate activity in a private space without that person’s Consent;
- Prostituting another individual; or
- Knowingly exposing another individual to a sexually transmitted disease or virus without that individual’s knowledge; and
- Inducing incapacitation for the purpose of making another person vulnerable to non-consensual sexual activity.
Stalking
- fear for their safety or the safety of others; or
- suffer substantial emotional distress.