© 2024 WGLT
A public service of Illinois State University
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

UI Prof. Jay Kesan To Go On 'University-Sanctioned Leave' In 2020

Jay Kesan
Illinois Public Media and University of Illinois College of Law
Jay Kesan

A University of Illinois law professor previouslyaccused of sexual misconductand slated to return to teach in January will instead go on "university-sanctioned leave."

That’s according to an email sent this week to College of Law faculty and students on behalf of the college’s dean, Vikram Amar, and reviewed by NPR Illinois. The email says Jay Kesan, faculty at the U of I’s flagship campus in Urbana-Champaign, will not teach two courses he had previously been scheduled to begin in January 2020. Instead, on January 1, he will go on leave “during which he will not be teaching” the email says.The university said in a statement that it will not comment on this “ongoing personnel matter.” Kesan did not return several requests for comment via email and phone. A university spokesperson did not answer questions as to whether Kesan would be paid while on leave or allowed to go on campus before the publication of this story.

 

Before it was announced to College of Law members that Kesan would not be teaching in early 2020, a notice about his history as a sexual harasser was shared with students who had the option to register for classes, which NPR Illinois also reviewed. 

The notification, shared on the "intranet" site students log into, said that during a university investigation that began in 2015, complainants “were able to offer credible evidence establishing that they had been subjected to unwelcome verbal or physical conduct by Professor Kesan.” The statement went on to detail some of the unwanted behavior, including “rubbing a female student’s thigh” as well as sexual references and other touching. 

In 2018, details of that university investigation were made public after a friend of a victim asked what was being done to protect students at a#MeToo forumon campus. The investigation had begun in 2015 and took more than 700 days to complete, even though university policystates investigations should be done as "expeditiously as possible" and typically take 60 days or less to complete.Mediauncovered the investigation through public-record requests.

University investigators found Kesan had violated the “spirit” of the campus' sexual harassment policy and the code of conduct. Some, like College of Law professor and associate dean Lesley Wexler, said the standard for sexual harassment according to campus policy was very narrow. She told NPR Illinois and ProPublicathat behavior must be severe or pervasive, which “sets a very high bar.”

The case becamenational newsin 2018 and sparked sexual harassmentpolicy reform effortsat the U of I. Areportwas released with recommendations last month, but the timeline and details of implementation for the sprawling policy changes are not yet clear. 

Kesan took a year-long voluntary unpaid leave for 2019, in the wake of calls for his resignation. After the allegations were made public, he penned aletteradmitting to behavior as described by complainants and apologized. 

A 2019investigationby ProPublica and NPR Illinois detailed several cases where U of I professors had been found to have violated university policy after facing accusations of sexual misconduct and had their reputations protected by the university. Some were promised the university would not disclose the details of their resignations. Others, including Kesan, were allowed to remain on faculty.

 

Copyright 2021 NPR Illinois | 91.9 UIS. To see more, visit NPR Illinois | 91.9 UIS.

Rachel's reports currently focus on education and equity. She's also reported extensively on arts, community & diverse culture.