Before #MeToo There WasAarefah Mosavi

Aarefah Mosavi (Center) Leading the chants at a demonstration to demand the removal of a rapist from the UC Berkely campus.

JUSTICE FOR AAREFAH MOSAVI

Build the Movement to Fight Rape and Sexual Assault

Demand that rapist Chester Brown and all sexual predators be held accountable

To make a contribution to help cover Aarefah’s legal expenses, go to her Justice4Aarefah GoFundme account at:

https://www.gofundme.com/justice4aarefah

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Justice does exist. Survivors across the world have asked where it is. I say, it’s in the palm of your hands! Those of us who have endured such atrocities are not the weak; those rapists are the failures of society. The rapists are the predators, and such people should pay dearly for what they have chosen to do!

–Aarefah Mosavi

           The rapist, the college administration, and the judicial system—the three obstacles that a woman college student must overcome if she seeks justice against her assailant. It is a struggle that few women are willing to undertake, and even fewer are able to endure to a successful conclusion. For in most cases, the rapist takes the woman’s voice when he takes her body; the crime is too terrible for her to mention, and her feelings of shame condemn her to silence.

             But Aarefah Mosavi defied all of the norms. In many ways, she seemed to be the most unlikely person to speak out: as a Muslim woman and as a daughter of immigrant parents, Aarefah faced unique and intensified pressures to avoid any publicity or legal conflict. Perhaps these perceived vulnerabilities figured into the calculations of her rapist, when he was deciding whether or not he could get away with violating her. And almost certainly, the administrators of Mount San Antonio College weighed those same considerations when they decided to quash her formal complaint process, unilaterally.

             Regardless of whatever circumstances they believed that they could exploit against her, one thing soon became clear: they all severely underestimated Aarefah Mosavi.

             One can only imagine their shock when Aarefah went public, naming the criminal and his crime, and exposing the cover-up by her college administrators. This was years before the emergence of the #MeToo movement, before there were hundreds of celebrities exposing the abuses of men in high places. Here was the same woman that the rapist, Chester Brown, had seen paralyzed with fear on that one fateful night; the same woman that the college administrators had callously decided to steamroll out of their offices—and yet she was not the same. Aarefah was fighting.

Protesters march on April 23, 2014 on the Mt. SAC campus in support of Aarefah Mosavi and demand to remove student and math tutor Chester Brown from campus and for President Bill Scroggins and others to step down. (Caption and Photo Pablo Unzueta SAC Media)

The rape and the rapist

             Located on the eastern part of Los Angeles County, the most noteworthy feature of Mount San Antonio College (Mt. SAC) is its farm. There are animals, barns, and pastures which accompany the Agricultural Science building, and these serve as novel attractions to students from the city. Aarefah visited there on the night of December 12, 2013, with a man she believed was her friend: Chester Brown.

             In the darkness and isolation of the farm, where no one could see or hear her protest, Chester Brown demanded that Aarefah remove her hijab. He grabbed her arm and began groping her.

             “I don’t want this,” “I want to go home,” Aarefah pleaded.

             Brown shoved her against a wall, overpowering her. He forced his hands under her shirt and her bra. Then, he raped her with his fingers, deliberately and repeatedly inflicting pain.

             Aarefah was in shock, terrified, frozen. She looked into the empty darkness for someone to help her, but she was alone with her rapist.

             Chester Brown later claimed that the encounter consisted of only a “hug” and a “wiggle,” although he conceded that it was not consensual. He enjoyed pursuing women who were a “challenge,” and he had a particular fixation about Aarefah’s headscarf, about the sexual boundary which the hijab represents in the Islamic religion. When interviewed, Chester suggested that the only reason for Aarefah to take offense toward his conduct was because, on the farm, Aarefah was “with her God.” It may be his only original distinction as a rapist, that he somehow equated the presence of farm animals with a religious experience, and thereby concluded that his lack of respect for her religion could then justify his lack of respect for her body and her person.

             Chester Brown, individually, would not have appeared to be a formidable opponent, but for the fact that the administrators of Mt. SAC also decided to enforce the same lack of respect for Aarefah’s rights and wellbeing.

The administration of a cover-up

             From the outset of the investigation, the only deliberate and palpable aim of the Mt. SAC administrators was to crush Aarefah Mosavi into silence. There is no other explanation, aside from sadism, for the events that unfolded.

             The Title IX coordinator, when meeting with Aarefah, made the extraordinary request that Aarefah re-enact the rape by performing the rapist’s actions on another administrator who was present at the meeting. Aarefah politely replied that she felt too uncomfortable to do such a thing. The administrators, however, then cited her refusal to re-enact the rape as a failure to cooperate. Strike one.

             Chester Brown was permitted to continue attending classes and working in the same building as Aarefah during the so-called investigation. When Aarefah complained about repeatedly encountering her rapist on campus, the administration replied that she should not report the encounters unless he touched her or spoke to her. Strike two.

             The investigation itself was a farce. The administration vouched for the good character of Chester Brown by citing the testimony of his supervisor and his friends; at the same time, the administration dismissed and refused even to interview Aarefah’s witnesses, hypocritically citing that they were not present to see the rape. These dismissed witnesses included another woman who had also faced sexual harassment and religious discrimination by Chester Brown. Strike three, and the case was thrown out.

             It was an arrogant and heavy-handed cover-up, in which the administration could hardly manage even the façade of due process. Not all college administrations are so crude—others achieve the same result using more sophistication and cleverness, with a staff of official women’s “advocates” who are able to hoodwink the unsuspecting women into submission.

             For so many of the brave women who come forward to expose rape and sexual assault, the most traumatic part of their experience is actually the discovery that their college administrations are completely on the side of the perpetrators. Aarefah Mosavi gave tribute to these tragic stories when she testified publicly at a BAMN tribunal. The cases she described all ended in suicide: “They did not take their lives because they were raped per se, but because their administrations failed them.” To challenge an individual rapist is sufficiently daunting in itself; but to challenge the authority and prestige of an entire social institution—that requires a movement.

Fighting for justice

             Aarefah’s public campaign created a sensation on the Mt. SAC campus and beyond. Thousands of people watched the videos of her testimony at the BAMN tribunals. Students marched and rallied, and activists distributed flyers that included the name and picture of the rapist. Aarefah and her fellow leaders were accomplishing in practice what the Mt. SAC administrators had refused to do themselves: protecting the students.

             During the course of the campaign, Chester Brown left the campus, along with the administrators who had enforced the steamroller-style cover-up. Aarefah filed lawsuits against Chester Brown and against the Mt. SAC administration. This remarkable young woman, who had once seemed so vulnerable and powerless in the eyes of Chester Brown and the Mt. SAC administration, was truly rising above them.

             She now faces the most monstrous obstacle, by far, in her fight for justice: the judicial system of a government led by President Donald Trump.

             Under any political leadership, the American legal apparatus can be a vicious battlefield for any woman who dares to enter with a claim of rape. The reality of most rape cases is that the woman is put on trial: she is accused of being a liar and a slanderer, and she often faces the slut-shaming insinuation that she is somehow more sexually and morally repulsive than the rapist. The rapist’s defense usually combines two contradictory arguments: (1) he didn’t do it, and (2) the woman was asking for it. The astounding nature of the legal system is that it can arrive at both conclusions simultaneously. The man can be “right” in every way possible, and the woman can be “wrong” in every way possible, even if those conclusions are factually incompatible with each other.

             These contradictions are not the product of any deep legal wisdom: they are merely the ideological reflections of status and power.

             For Aarefah Mosavi to prevail in court, she will need to bring a power of her own.

             Since the time when her legal fight began, two new dynamics have emerged:  the election of Donald Trump, and the growth of the #MeToo movement. Both of these opposing dynamics will enter the courtroom, and each will be measuring its strength against the other. The court is keenly aware of those facts. Chester Brown’s attorney will be arguing to ban the use of the word “rape” and any mention of the #MeToo movement during the trial. And Judge Fitzgerald has already decided to dismiss the case against the Mt. SAC administration, while expressing sympathy for Chester Brown. A sharp struggle is certain.

             In the present crisis of American democracy, the struggle of Aarefah Mosavi seems like an inconceivably heroic distillation of the conflict. Yet there is an irony in that struggle. Throughout Aarefah’s four long years of fighting for dignity, she has in truth already dignified herself and other rape survivors, far above the ability of any court to add or detract. Nor is it within a court’s authority to grant dignity—or take it away. What is demanded, then, that the court can give? It is that the court must yield to the power, the dignity, and the justice that stands personified in Aarefah Mosavi. Every institution, every court and college administration, must surrender their hateful practices of defending the rapists and silencing the women. For the sake of a growing movement of young people, who have no institutions which they can call their own, we demand justice for Aarefah Mosavi.

2018.07.24

“To my supporters: you are heroes. This fight is not just about me. Over 17.7 million women have been victims of rape, but 98% of rapists never spend a day in jail in the United States of America. This fight is about reclaiming the promise of justice! It is about reaffirming women’s rights and human rights! It is about crushing discrimination, sexism, and corruption, and those hypocrites who prosper from the suffering of others! As a rape survivor, my appreciation goes out to you! Thank you.”

Aarefah Mosavi

Brief on Summary Judgement to demand Mt. SAC administration go to trial can be found HERE

Statement of Facts of the Case can be found HERE

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In response to the shameful not guilty verdict in

Aarefah Mosavi’s lawsuit against rapist Chester Brown:

For a Printable Copy of this Page Click HERE 

To all the survivors of rape and sexual assault, to all the people who stand with us in action against misogyny and its proponents and defenders, the story of Aarefah Mosavi should be an example not of defeat but of the growth of our movement. From the beginning, we understood that the legal system and the sexism engrained in our society places an almost insurmountable burden on the survivor and in favor of the rapists. Despite today’s shameful decision by the jury, the victory in this over 4-year ordeal lies in the fact that through this fight Aarefah has asserted her power and dignity through speaking publicly against Chester Brown, the man who raped her. Together with the help of Aarefah’s supporters, we have exposed a predator and prevented him from preying on other women. We have warned other women and we have inspired other survivors to overcome the prejudice and sexism of our society to be unafraid to name their rapists and to build a movement to expose and stop rape and sexual assault through a collective fight.

We may have not won our trial today, but we have shown that we can take away the ability of the courts and school administrators to sweep rape under the rug, to bury the secrets, to blame and re-victimize survivors while providing safety and secrecy to the rapists. The truth must come to light. First Aarefah Mosavi, then the #metoo movement, have shown that rapists and sexual offenders can be held accountable publicly, scrutinized and isolated in the public eye, made to bear the shame and burden of their atrocious acts, and not their victims. Under the biggest misogynist president Donald Trump, it is more important than ever that we continue to speak out against rape and sexual assault and take action to hold them accountable. If we continue to build our movement in the streets and are successful to bring it into the courtrooms, we will start winning justice in the courts as well.

Chester Brown, the rapist, the Mt. SAC administration, and this court decision will not succeed in silencing me or the movement against rape and sexual assault. This trial was a charade of injustice. I was raped and sexually assaulted by Chester Brown on the Mt. SAC campus and the college administration failed to protect me or to provide me with justice. Once again, today the court system failed me and other rape survivors. This entire trial revealed the absurdity of the court which allows lies and blatant fiction to masquerade for the truth.

 

Chester Brown lied on the witness stand for almost 3 hours, obviously perjuring himself or pretending to have no memory when he knew very well what he had done to me. He denied every instance of discrimination, harassment, his assault and rape of me. Judge Phillips issued a gag order on me, my witnesses, and even my attorney from even saying the word “rape” during the trial. The judge issued a gag order on me, my witnesses, or even my attorney from placing my fight for justice against Chester Brown and Mt. SAC within the context of the #metoo movement. During the trial and closing arguments, the judge allowed Chester Brown’s attorneys to reference evidence that had not been formally included in the trial, yet would not allow my attorneys to present or even reference similar evidence.

 

Justice will not be found in the courts alone, and relying solely on the courts is something I have never done, nor will I ever counsel any survivor to do. I didn’t wait for the administration or the courts to give me justice, I went out and got justice through exposing Chester Brown’s crimes against me to the campus community and to the public to ensure that he would not do what he did to me to anyone else. Despite today’s decision, I forced rapist Chester Brown to have to come to court, take the witness stand, endure cross examination, and to have to face me. My legal fight is not over, and our movement is only just getting started. The justice we as survivors can win is in the palm of our hands, our voice, and our defense of each other and our common humanity.” – Aarefah Mosavi, August 10, 2018

“It’s clear the jury did not consider the facts in this case. From before the trial even started, the judge issued rulings limiting what the jury could see or hear, unquestionably influencing the scope of the trial and the final verdict. Even without such limitations, the level of bias in favor of the rapist and against women who try to bring cases to court is so great that for a woman plaintiff to win a rape case against a man is almost impossible to win unless there are either a) a parade of victims who are able to bring a collective case against him, and/or 2) unless the woman has been violently beaten, bloodied, or otherwise severely physically injured or maimed and can show evidence to that. It is a set-up against the woman and a cycle that the rapists, the college administration, and the courts rely on to perpetuate the continued subordination of women. Aarefah courageously disrupted that cycle and stood against it. Aarefah Mosavi is a true hero.”

—- Shanta Driver, lead attorney and national chair of the Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, Integration, and Immigrant Rights and Fight for Equality By Any Means Necessary (BAMN)

 

Help Build the Movement to Win Justice for Aarefah Mosavi:

Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, Integration, and Immigrant Rights, and Fight for Equality By Any Means Necessary (BAMN)   

1-855-275-2266    email@bamn.com   

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