(AP) — Colleges that expel students whom they suspect of having committed sexual assault are being asked to go further by specifying the reason for expulsion on their transcripts. Victims' advocates say it's critical to ensuring that such students don't end up on other campuses without their new schools knowing the potential risk and to holding them accountable, long term, so they can't just move on with a clean slate. Speier, a Democrat from the Bay Area, said most schools already note incidents of cheating on students' records, so it makes sense to note if someone was expelled for sexual misconduct. Title IX, the federal law prohibiting gender-based discrimination in education, including sexual harassment and sexual violence, requires schools to find an accused student responsible if there's a better than 50-50 chance a sexual assault occurred. The university's office of Institutional Opportunity and Access, though, concluded that he had "non-consensual sex" with Tackett and violated the school's sexual harassment policy with McClure. Furthermore, the women say that although the university agreed to place a notation for "nonacademic misconduct" on the player's transcript, it was inadequate because he was able to resume his athletic career at a different school. Mike Reilly, who heads the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers, said people often question why schools frequently handle sexual violence reports instead of law enforcement.