Follow the Story
383% jump in calls to poison control center over side effects of ‘healthy’ drink
Ex-University of Virginia student gets 5 life sentences for fatally shooting 3 football players
University of Virginia strikes deal with Trump admin to pause discrimination probes
70% of people who have a near-death experience make this change — even more than getting a divorce
University of Virginia president James Ryan resigns in wake of Trump administration pressure over DEI policies
Doctors discover drug already on the market could prevent 1M new cases of Alzheimer’s a year
The University of Virginia’s dean of students testified Wednesday that he predicted a since-retracted Rolling Stone magazine story about campus rape would be a gotcha piece even before it was published.
“In my opinion, it was a hatchet job!” Allen Groves said at the Rolling Stone defamation trial in Charlottesville, Va.
Former university dean of students Nicole Eramo is suing Rolling Stone for $7.85 million, claiming the 2014 story depicted her as turning a blind eye to allegations made by a student, identified only as Jackie, who alleged she was gang-raped by seven Phi Kappa Psi fraternity members.
Groves described how difficult it was to launch an investigation into Jackie’s allegations after she spoke to Eramo, given that the student claimed not to remember the full name of the fraternity house where she was allegedly raped.
She also refused to give the school key names.
“I was angry that Jackie wouldn’t give us any names . . . it’s as frustrated as I’ve ever been in this job,” he said.


