Crime & Safety
Sexual Misconduct Or Soured Love Affair: Former Stanford Student vs. Silicon Valley Exec
In dueling lawsuits, one claims forced sex at Los Altos home and in Europe; the other calls it attempt to defame and ruin his reputation.

A former Stanford University student has filed a federal lawsuit claiming a Silicon Valley executive sexually assaulted her during their one-year relationship, but the executive in a countersuit has denied the allegations and alleged the lawsuit was motivated by a desire to defame him and ruin his reputation.
The civil suits by Virginia resident Elise Clougherty, who filed hers on Jan. 27 in U.S. District Court in San Francisco, and Joseph Lonsdale, who filed in federal court in Oakland last Friday, depict starkly contrasting views of a love affair that took them to New York, London and Asia from 2012 to 2013.
Clougherty, who is seeking general and punitive damages and attorneys fees from Lonsdale and his company Formation 8 in excess of $75,000, claims he sexually assaulted and manipulated her, causing her to suffer pain, anxiety, depression, embarrassment, ridicule and post-traumatic distress disorder.
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Lonsdale is also asking for general and punitive damages and attorneysā fees, charging his ex-girlfriend with āa vicious and vengeful campaign...to destroy his reputation with false and outrageous accusationsā and intentionally trying to defame him among his friends, business colleagues and with Stanford.
The 32-year-old Lonsdale, a 2003 Stanford graduate, co-founded Palantir Technologies, a Palo Alto computer software firm that contracted with U.S. government intelligence agencies, and co-founded Formation 8, a venture capital firm based in San Francisco, in 2011.
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Clougherty, 24, who graduated from Stanford in 2013, said in her lawsuit that she and Lonsdale first met briefly in 2011 at a bar in New York while she was in her second year at Stanford, after she requested to meet him to talk about technology entrepreneurship.
The two maintained contact by email and met each other again in a bar in Palo Alto in 2011, but she claimed that in February 2012 Lonsdale used his āleverageā to become her mentee in a class at Stanford, attempted to sexually assault her at his home in Los Altos and ārepeatedly forced (her) to have sexual contact without her consent.ā
In March 2012, when Lonsdale learned she planned to vacation in Spain with her family, Clougherty said he asked her to meet him for several days in London and Rome and she agreed after he told her they would stay in separate rooms.
But when she arrived in London, she said he made her stay in his room, where they had sex without her consent and throughout the trip to both cities he ādeprived her of both food and sleep by scheduling late evening and early morning activities, delaying meals, not ordering her enough food and other such tactics,ā she claimed.
During their last night in Rome, according to Clougherty, Lonsdale āforcefully rapedā her and she ended up locking herself in the bathroom and ācried for hours.ā
Clougherty claimed that Lonsdale āraped her hundreds of times over the past yearā they were together that he had used āmany forms of psychological manipulation and control on her, including but not limited to āpositive intermittent reinforcement,ā āgaslighting,ā isolation, sleep deprivation, food deprivation, anger, embarrassment, and guilt.ā
In 2013, with her mother, Clougherty said she filed a complaint with Stanford accusing Lonsdale of sexual harassment and misconduct under Title IX and after investigating, the university sided with her and banned Lonsdale from the campus for 10 years. Her suit charges him with sexual battery, sexual assault, domestic violence, gender violence, sexual harassment and infliction of emotional distress.
She also includes Lonsdaleās company Formation 8 as a defendant, charging it with ānegligent retention and supervisionā for permitting Lonsdale to supervise her as an intern there while he maintained an āinappropriate sexual relationshipā with her.
In his countersuit, Lonsdale uses as exhibits dozens of emails and texts that Clougherty sent while they were together to show that she cherished their relationship, enjoyed and even initiated their intimate contact, ātook multiple vacations together, got to know each othersā familiesā and ādeveloped a deep affection for one another.ā
He denied that he forced himself on her in his home in Los Altos, saying they had their first kiss there and Clougherty that night sent him an email stating āI love getting to know you.ā
They had their first sexual encounter in Rome in March 2012, he said, and afterwards she sent him messages saying āthe love I feel for you is deepā and describing their time in Rome as the āday we shared such a beautiful moment together! If you know what I mean...ā
Their relationship started to wane, he said, when the two took a trip to Asia in August 2012, during which he had to go to business appointments and Clougherty ālashed out at him verbally,ā leading Lonsdale to question her stability and their compatibility.
After the Asia trip, Lonsdale wrote her to say that her ābinary swinging between things is hurtful and itās very immatureā and that while he cared about her and thought she was āamazing,ā he felt under siege and unable to know how to deal with it.
Clougherty responded with a 10-page, emailed letter, describing how in late 2011 after suffering from an eating disorder she had been involuntarily committed by her parents to a mental hospital where she said her āperception was warpedā and she āstarted seeing myriads of color on white tile floorsā and at times became āphysically incapable of speaking the truth.ā
Lonsdale stated in the suit that Stanford did not inform him of Cloughertyās allegations in her Title IX complaint, failed to review her emails to him and that he is in the process of appealing the universityās decision against him using the emails as evidence.
He said that in February 2014, Clougherty told a potential investor of one of his business ventures that Lonsdale had sexually assaulted her, prompting the investor to withdraw, and told an official of a non-profit group that there was an āongoing scandalā about him, leading the official to ask Lonsdale not to attend a dinner with college students.
In his suit, along with claims for damages, Lonsdale has asked the judge to issue an order prohibiting Clougherty from making statements that he committed sexual misconduct against her.
Both plaintiffs have requested jury trials.
--Bay City News
--Image via Shutterstock
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