
She ran to the campus police at the advisement of her therapist, according to Allred’s statement.


He had filed an appeal and the university official in charge of telling Angell forgot. In fact, a few weeks later she saw the male student in the cafeteria room with his friends, who taunted her that he was back. Jessica Hill/APīut the attacker wasn’t gone. The four women, who say they were victims of sexual assaults while students at the school, have announced they are filing a federal discrimination lawsuit against the university. Attorney Gloria Allred, center, walks with current and former University of Connecticut students, from left, Rose Richi, left, Erica Daniels, Carolyn Luby and Kylie Angell to a news conference Monday in Hartford, Conn.

“Though I was emotionally and mentally exhausted, I felt that this was a victory and that I could finally go back to my life as a student,” Angell recalled at the press conference.
