@hawkeye10,
You completely missed the salient point that colleges and universities have their own procedures for investigating and adjudicating sexual assault allegations, and these may differ from those done by law enforcement.
If one student has been found to have committed a sexual assault against another student, there is no reason that that student should be allowed to remain on campus. In an enclosed environment/community, like a campus, someone who has been sexually assaulted should not have to continue attending classes, or living in a dorm, or participating in activities, where the offender might also be present. Nor should any other students be needlessly subjected to any threat the offender might pose. When a student violates a college or university's code of conduct, they forfeit their right to remain enrolled at that institution.
Removing a sexual offender from enrollment at one college does not prohibit that student from obtaining an education elsewhere. It is not depriving anyone of the chance to get an education.
Even in our jails and prisons, people are able to obtain degrees.
Your pompous posturing, about how those poor sex offenders are "victimized" by suffering the consequences of their transgressions, is just more of your usual whining. Those who abuse others, and violate laws, should be mindful of the consequences
before they act.