Education

Cease-and-desist order issued against Duke private investigator

A Chapel Hill psychologist who looked into a 2013 sexual assault claim that resulted in a Duke University student-athlete being expelled has been ordered to stop conducting private investigations.

Posted Updated
Lewis McLeod
DURHAM, N.C. — A Chapel Hill psychologist who looked into a 2013 sexual assault claim that resulted in a Duke University student-athlete being expelled has been ordered to stop conducting private investigations.

In a Dec. 4 letter obtained Monday by WRAL News, Dr. Celia Irvine was issued a cease-and-desist notice from the North Carolina Department of Public Safety, which informed her that she is not properly licensed to conduct "private protective services activities."

The letter specifically refers to "private investigator services" for Duke.

According to a lawsuit against the university, Irvine was hired to review an 18-year-old female student's claim that soccer player and senior Lewis McLeod sexually assaulted her in November 2013.

Neither Duke nor Durham police charged McLeod, of Australia, but, based on Irvine's work, the school's Office of Student Conduct found him guilty of sexual assault and expelled him just before his May 10 graduation.

The complaint contends that McLeod, whose was in the U.S. on a student visa, had a job offer with a Wall Street firm that was contingent upon his graduation and that his "inability to actually assume employment in this prestigious position is substantially certain to negatively impact him forevermore."

McLeod has maintained that his encounter with the woman, whom he met at a local bar, was consensual – a key issue in the case – and that the woman "got emotional" and began to cry.

The lawsuit is still working its way through the legal system with parties on both sides agreeing that the case will not go to court until at least next February.

McLeod, meanwhile, is back living in Australia.

The state's Private Protective Services Board is expected to hold a hearing about Irvine's case in April.

 Credits 

Copyright 2024 by Capitol Broadcasting Company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.