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ABA votes to indefinitely table affirmative consent resolution

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Yesterday, by a vote of 265鈥165, the American Bar Association鈥檚 House of Delegates the affirmative consent resolution that would have urged state legislatures to adopt a criminal-law definition of consent similar to the 鈥渁ffirmative consent鈥 standard popular on college campuses. The vote came despite a of the resolution that recognized the 鈥淸c]onstitutionally-guaranteed presumption of innocence鈥 and clarified that the prosecution would still have the burden of proving non-consent beyond a reasonable doubt. While the revised version addressed some of the most severe problems with the initial resolution 鈥 such as the total abandonment of the presumption of innocence 鈥 it still defined consent in a way that would effectively criminalize a great deal of consensual sexual contact and open the door to arbitrary and selective enforcement.
The resolution met with vociferous opposition from due process advocates, including FIRE and, most critically, the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.
With this vote, the ABA becomes the second major legal organization to reject efforts to move to an affirmative-consent standard 鈥 in 2016, the American Law Institute鈥檚 membership overwhelmingly rejected a proposal to introduce an affirmative consent standard into ALI鈥檚 influential Model Penal Code.
FIRE is relieved to see that outside the walls of the university, the concept of due process is still meaningful to large numbers of people across the political and ideological spectrum. We hope college administrators will pay heed to the decisions of these major legal organizations when considering how to craft their own policies.
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