A Brigham Young University sophomore claims she is being punished by her own school — for reporting to cops that she had been raped.
Madi Barney, 20, who has gone public with her allegations against the conservative Mormon-run school, told the Salt Lake Tribune that BYU is now blocking her from registering for classes and she has filed a sexual discrimination complaint with the feds.
A spokeswoman for the Provo, Utah-based university insisted that was not the case.
“While I cannot talk about an individual case, I can assure you that we would never put a hold on a student’s registration because she reported her rape to the police,” BYU spokeswoman Carri Jenkins told NBC News.
There was no immediate confirmation that Barney filed the complaint on Monday from the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights.
“As a policy, we don’t confirm the receipt of complaints publicly,” an official there said.
Barney was allegedly raped in September during a date in her off-campus apartment by 39-year-old Nasiru Seidu, who has been arrested and charged with sexual assault, The Salt Lake Tribune reported. Seidu had used a fake name, lied about his age, and did not tell Barney he was married, according the paper.
Two months later, Barney was notified that BYU has launched an Honor Code investigation into her.
BYU, which is a private school run by the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-day Saints, bars students under its Honor Code from, among other things, having premarital sex, same-sex dating, drinking alcohol — or even being in the bedroom of someone of the opposite sex.
It later turned out that the school got wind of the alleged rape after a Utah County sheriff’s deputy named Edwin Randolph had turned over the police report to BYU.









