Lawsuit alleges sexual assault during Virginia Military Institute overnight open house
A prospective student's lawsuit alleges that a Virginia Military Institute cadet sexually assaulted her during an overnight open house

A prospective student claims in a lawsuit that a Virginia Military Institute cadet sexually assaulted her during a 2021 overnight open house.
The suit filed in U.S. District Court in Lynchburg on Thursday states that the woman, then a high school student interested in attending the nationās oldest state-supported military college, was assigned a cadet host with whom she shared a room, The Roanoke Times reported.
The woman identified as Jane Doe in court records attended a two-day open house, described on VMIās website as the best way for high school students to āexperience first-hand what itās like being a cadet,ā with her parents, who have strong ties to the school, according to the lawsuit. The assault allegedly happened early on Sept. 18, 2021, and later that day after leaving campus with her parents, the student āexpressed in an extremely distressed mannerā that she had been sexually assaulted, the lawsuit stated. The cadet was not identified by name or sex in the pleading.
The following day, Doeās father reported the incident to VMI Police and the matter was turned over to the schoolās Title IX coordinator. In December, Superintendent Cedric Wins told Doeās parents that their daughterās claims had been deemed unfounded but didnāt share any other information, according to the lawsuit.
Doe accuses VMI and its board of visitors of violating Title IX, a federal law that prohibits sexual discrimination against students, prospective students and employees of public schools.
āThe environment in which Jane Doe stayed was dangerous due to VMIās deliberate indifference of campus safety and Title IX protections,ā the lawsuit alleges.
The lawsuit accuses VMI of failing to maintain a safe campus as required by federal law and mishandling Doeās complaint through the Title IX process. It also alleges that the student and her family were not advised of their rights under the law or provided written statements of the investigationās finding.
The suit asks a federal judge to grant an injunction requiring the school to abide by all Title IX requirements, but it doesn't ask for a specific amount of damages. Doe chose not to apply to VMI and suffered economic and emotional harm from the schoolās āsevere, pervasive and objectively offensiveā handling of her case, the lawsuit alleges.
A VMI spokeswoman declined to comment to the newspaper on the case, citing a policy of not discussing pending litigation. Tommy Strelka, a Roanoke attorney who filed the lawsuit, also declined to comment.
In 2021, a state-sanctioned report found VMI failed to address institutional racism and sexism and must be held accountable for making changes.