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No matter what UW-Madison Chancellor Rebecca Blank decides, she will be criticized.

Former Wisconsin Badgers wide receiver Quintez Cephus, who was expelled from the university last semester after being accused by two women of sexual assault but was acquitted of those charges by a Dane County jury earlier this month, has petitioned for readmission to the university. The decision is up to Blank, who will likely face blowback from either black community leaders or sexual assault victims and advocates.

Blank must consider the ramifications for two groups who often face skepticism: African-Americans who are disproportionately affected by the criminal justice system and women who believe they are victims of sexual assault.

“The chancellor cannot make any decision that is satisfying,” said retired University of Cincinnati professor Francis Cullen, whose research focuses on campus sexual assaults.

Black community leaders have called for Cephus’ re-admittance while also blasting what they consider to be poor conditions for black students on campus. Advocates for sexual assault survivors worry whether future survivors will feel comfortable in coming forward to report assaults.