| made it clear that as chief executive, | accepted responsibility for any shortcomings or failings on the University’s part. No act of sexual violence can be tolerated, period, even off-campus (which is where all the serious incidents, as reported, took place). And no one, regardless of how important the student- athlete was to program success, was to be above the law. Basic decency, reinforced by the Christian commitment to creating a caring community, called for the gold standard with respect to prevention in the first place, and effective response if prevention safeguards failed. Explosion III As the old saying goes, “there are usually two sides to the story.” Pepper Hamilton’s recommendations, coupled with the Board of Regents’ “findings of fact,” created a toxic killer of a narrative. The devastating conclusion — a fundamental failure of the institution itself— echoed throughout campus and demoralized Baylor Nation. An operational failure of the highest order had been identified, with profound impacts on victims and their families. The “other side of the story” was left untold. Campus safety — and the safety of our students in all respects, including freedom from interpersonal violence — was a high priority throughout my years of servant-leadership. The idea that Pat Neff Hall was oblivious to student-safety concerns was belied not only by common sense and basic human decency, but refuted by the facts. Here, in brief, is the other side of the story. Indeed, iln the fall of 2010, the EC round table focused specifically on issues of student safety arising out of a Department of Education (Office of Civil Rights) investigation into a tragic student death at Eastern Michigan University. OCR’s compliance review (under Title IX) was prompted by an on-campus student -death. A 22-year old student at EMU was found dead in her residence hall after having been sexually assaulted and brutally beaten. The government’s devastating report issued in November 2010. The EC prom