That's the address of a Washington Post article from June 22, 2016.
Libby Locke, a lawyer for Dean Eramo, is quoted in the article as saying:
"We feel confident that a jury will see that Jackie was not a reliable source of information and that Rolling Stone knew it when they published the false and defamatory article."
A lot of people have gotten raped at the University of Virginia, for years, and the University of Virginia has not punished the rapists or stopped its rape culture; the Rolling Stone article accurately described that problem, corroborated by many sources whom nobody could accuse of being unreliable about anything. The article also portrayed Dean Eramo as being part of the university's system, but not as the person who caused what happened to Jackie.
The person who caused what happened to Jackie was identified by the Charlottesville police; he is Drew in the article. His financial records corroborate that he had dinner with Jackie on the night that she says she was later raped, although the Charlottesville police did not want to report that. That he was an undergraduate student and a member of a fraternity in 2006 and then also an undergraduate in 2012, when Jackie was raped in her first year of college, fits the profile of a serial rapist who was allowed to return to the school after being suspended or voluntarily deciding to take time off because he was accused of rape in 2006; someone should investigate him to discover if that's what happened.
Someone should subpoena Drew's financial records.
Somebody should subpoena the University of Virginia's records about Drew, the fraternity of which he was a member in 2006, Phi Kappa Psi, and everything else that could be relevant to what happened to Jackie.
Somebody should subpoena Phi Kappa Psi's communications from 2012 and until such time as is relevant to the court proceedings happening in 2016; text messages, emails, communications among the members who were in residence at the fraternity house, communications between the house and the national organization, communications between Phi Kappa Psi at the local and national levels and the administration of the University of Virginia.
Somebody should tell the court that fraternities routinely don't report to their host schools the parties at which they haze, drug and/or rape people. Phi Kappa Psi, the University of Virginia and the Charlottesville police deliberately obfuscated that fact of fraternity life in their public statements about Rolling Stone.
Probably, the local police in every town in the country that has a school financially supported by powerful alumni know that their careers would be jeopardized by doing real investigations of rape committed by male students, and particularly by members of fraternities.
Everyone who works for a school like the University of Virginia also knows that to conduct real investigations or to punish rapists will cause you to be fired.
Copyright, with noted exceptions, L. Kochman, June 24, 2016 @ 9:16 p.m.