Who is Mara Louk, and where did she come from? After a r****ape claim, Visible Music College punished her:
Despite the fact that numerous campaigns for women’s safety have been launched, crimes against women continue. Another case of violence against women is being investigated. According to a recent report, an ex-student of a Memphis Christian college claims the school barred her from campus for allegedly having premarital s*x with her former boyfriend after she reported a fellow classmate r@ped her.
Mara Louk, a 22-year-old student at Visible Music College, filed a federal complaint with the US Department of Education last week, alleging that the school did nothing after she reported that a classmate choked and r@ped her in November 2021.
Who is Mara Louk, and where did she come from?
According to the alleged complaint, on November 2, 2021, a male classmate came over to her Louk apartment to play board games. After that, he began s**ually as****saulting her. The next day, she told a school administrator about her ordeal. “I did not expect them to actually throw him out,” Louk told NBC News, “but I did trust them enough to get a plan in motion to keep him away from me and other pupils.” She filed a s****exual as****sault report with Memphis Police the next day, but she was told a week later that there was insufficient evidence to warrant a detention.
Because the accused boy had not been charged by the cops, school administrators informed her on November 15th that he would be allowed to continue attending classes. Louk claimed that the administration department also accused her of breaking school rules prohibiting premarital phy****sical relationships with another student, despite her claims to the contrary. According to reports, the accused classmate told a school official that she had s****x with her former beau that semester, and that he confirmed it.
“The ‘Crime on Campus’ reporting program is operated in accordance with the requirements of the ‘College and University Security Information Act,’ (T.C.A. 49-7-2201, et. seq.) enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Tennessee, effective July 1, 1989,” according to the school’s Campus Safety section of the website. The Act requires each institution of higher education to report data related to crimes on campus and in student housing to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, which will “prescribe the reporting form and format for the collection of such data and issue an annual report of the results of such data submissions from each institution.”