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Court Tosses Suit Alleging Sexual Aggression at West Point

A NY appeals court says it is the job of Congress and the president, and not the courts, to confront claims of a sexually oppressive culture at West Point.
Commencement Ceremony Held At U.S. Military Academy At West Point
West Point cadets wait for the start of the 2017 graduation ceremony.Eduardo Munoz Alvarez / Getty Images file
/ Source: The Associated Press

NEW YORK — A New York federal appeals court says it's the job of Congress and the president, not the courts, to confront claims that female cadets face a sexually oppressive culture at the United States Military Academy at West Point.

Two of three judges on the Manhattan appeals panel rejected a former cadet's effort to force two former superior officers at the New York school to be held liable for what she calls a "sexually aggressive culture."

She says that culture included the routine harassment of female cadets and led to her rape by a fellow cadet. The lawsuit also cites offensive chants during campus marches.

A spokeswoman for lawyers representing the officers declined to comment. West Point did not immediately comment.

A civil rights lawyer called the ruling disappointing.