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- U-M EXPELLING STUDENT FOR INTERNET FANTASY
-
- By Judson Branam
- c. The Ann Arbor NEWS
-
- The University of Michigan is expelling a student who wrote a graphic
- fantasy of rape and torture that named a fellow student, then
- transmitted the story over Internet. The author also may face federal
- obscenity charges.
-
- U-M officials first learned of the postings from a U-M alumnus who is
- an attorney in Moscow. He reportedly saw the Jan. 9 story involving a
- female U-M student posted in a file reserved for sex stories, then
- complained to the University's computer network officials.
-
- The author of the fantasy, U-M sophomore Jake Baker, prefaced his
- stories with a disclaimer saying they contained "lots of sick stuff,"
- and he signed his real name to the postings.
-
- The story - titled with the woman's last name - describes torture with
- a hot curling iron, mutilation, and sodomy of a woman who is gagged
- and tied to a chair. The story ends with Baker lighting a match, as
- if to torch the woman's apartment, and telling her goodbye.
-
- It was the inclusion of the other student's name in the graphically
- violent sex fantasy that made the matter more serious, said Captain
- James Smiley of the U-M Department of Public Safety.
-
- "He was asked to leave, and he's outta here," Smiley said. "We think
- it's a very serious matter. When he named a student, that put a
- different light on it - he's just not fantasizing any more."
-
- But Baker's attorney, David Cahill of Ann Arbor, said it was just a
- fantasy.
-
- "This guy has never, ever threatened or contacted this woman in any
- way," Cahill said. We think it's unwarranted punishment for pure
- speech. A rather violent and pornographic story, yes, but we don't
- think he has a problem. We think he has an active imagination."
-
- U-M officials would only say Thursday that Baker, who is listed in
- University telephone and computer records, is not a student at the
- University. They cited a federal privacy law baring the discussion of
- student records.
-
- Baker said he willingly cooperated with University and law enforcement
- officials over the posting, including undergoing evaluation from
- psychiatrists at the U-M Medical Center.
-
- "I regret posting all the stories in general," he said today, "and I
- deeply regret any harm I've done to her or anyone else. I'm more than
- willing to make up whatever harm I've done, but not to leave the
- University."
-
- Baker said he met with housing officials Monday, and was asked for a
- follow-up session early Thursday.
-
- After he refused to meet because he had an exam and hadn't found legal
- counsel, he said, a plainclothes DPS officer and two housing department
- officers were waiting for him when he came out of his class. He was
- handed a notice of suspension, then taken back to his dorm room to
- quickly grab some clothes. He spent Thursday night in a local hotel
- room, and he and Cahill met with housing officials today.
-
- Baker was suspended under an emergency order from U-M President James
- J. Duderstadt, acting with authority of a bylaw of the U-M Board of
- Regents that allows him to take necessary actions to keep order on
- campus. Cahill said he believes this route was used because the
- University didn't have a strong enough case to pursue the matter under
- the more commonly used Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities.
-
- "The University has taken on the job of literary critic, and decided
- it's a campus emergency," Cahill said. "I think they've overreacted to
- something that's constitutionally protected."
-
- But university suspension may be only the start of the Boardman, Ohio
- native's troubles.
-
- "The University contacted the FBI after it identified the student
- putting the snuff stories on the Internet, and we are looking at
- whether there was a violation of the federal obscenity statute," said
- FBI Special Agent Gregory Stejskal of the bureau's Ann Arbor office.
- "We're looking into the possibility of charging him with distribution
- of obscene material."
-
- Congress recently added computer trafficking to pornography laws, and
- Stejskal said this case is a new wrinkle in policing the rapidly
- growing worldwide network of computer systems. Violation of the law is
- a felony that carries a penalty of up to five years in prison.
-
- "If its not the first," Stejskal said, "it's gotta be close to being
- the first case under it."
-
- END STORY
-
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