“I have to [take it seriously]. I take all criticism that is made in good faith seriously, and Patty is a very good person,” Starr said, according to the story. Starr was in New York speaking at Columbia University.

Her lawyer, Rogge Dunn, said in a Thursday interview he will release the Office for Civil Rights complaint, which contains specifics of Crawford’s allegations, only if given permission by the federal government.

“The allegations are that I never had the authority, resources or the independence to do the job appropriately, which the Department of Education writes in its guidance for Title IX coordinators and universities,” Crawford said in a Wednesday interview on “CBS This Morning.”

She has yet to name the senior leaders who allegedly prevented her from doing her job and retaliated against her.

“She has given that information to the Department of Education,” Dunn said. “So I would say at least for the next month, she’s going to let that process work its way through.”