Michigan - Bad Sporters https://www.badsporters.com News Blogging About Athletes Being Caught Up Tue, 30 Jun 2020 01:38:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 Michigan football coach Jim Harbaugh latest to take a pay cut https://www.badsporters.com/2020/06/30/michigan-football-coach-jim-harbaugh-latest-to-take-a-pay-cut/ https://www.badsporters.com/2020/06/30/michigan-football-coach-jim-harbaugh-latest-to-take-a-pay-cut/#respond Tue, 30 Jun 2020 01:38:17 +0000 https://badsporters.com/?p=7804 An offseason of being on the wrong side of the headlines continues for Iowa football. Amidst allegations that he directly contributed to “racial disparities in the Iowa football program,” Chris Doyle and Iowa parted ways earlier this month.  Monday, former Iowa running back Akrum Wadley added to the negativity surrounding the football program with a lengthy statement that […]

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An offseason of being on the wrong side of the headlines continues for Iowa football.

Amidst allegations that he directly contributed to “racial disparities in the Iowa football program,” Chris Doyle and Iowa parted ways earlier this month.  Monday, former Iowa running back Akrum Wadley added to the negativity surrounding the football program with a lengthy statement that made the rounds on Facebook.

In the social-media missive, Wadley, who played for the Hawkeyes from 2014-17, described his time as an Iowa football player as “a living nightmare.” He went on to state that “I wish I never played for the Iowa Hawkeyes.”

Wadley also accused offensive coordinator Brian Ferentz, the son of head coach Kirk Ferentz, of directing racially-charged remarks at him.

During the winter, the Iowa coaches handed out black wool NIKE hats to all the players. When we finished practice while leaving the field I liked to put my hat on immediately because it was cold and when sweating I didn’t want to get sick. One time when I was jogging to the facility, Coach Brian Ferentz says, ‘Hey Akrum, are you going to rob a gas station?’ I was so upset, but ignored him and kept going. This happened a couple more times in the same situation. The only difference is he said, ‘Akrum are you going to rob a liquor store?’ Those other times I just looked back at him and shook my head because I knew responding to him would result in some type of unfair punishment.

Wadley further claimed that Kirk Ferentz threatened to take away his meal card, alleging that he was forced to call his mother in New Jersey to order Dominos Pizza after the card was declined.  He also alleged that he “would have to go to a fan’s house earlier at night to eat.” Additionally, Wadley claimed he started drinking in college to help cope with the issues.

“My time at Iowa has done things to me that I am not going to discuss because knowing how these people treated me and other black athletes. I am done giving them power over me,” Wadley wrote. “My hope is my story and those of my teammates save others from the experiences, truths and mistake of playing under and for a coaching staff at Iowa that did and said nothing to stop the bullying and racism from happening to us under Chris Doyle, Brian Ferentz and Kirk Ferentz.”

As of yet, no one connected to the Iowa football program has publicly responded to Wadley’s allegations.

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Deputies arrest Michigan fugitive found in Randolph County https://www.badsporters.com/2020/06/20/deputies-arrest-michigan-fugitive-found-in-randolph-county/ https://www.badsporters.com/2020/06/20/deputies-arrest-michigan-fugitive-found-in-randolph-county/#respond Sat, 20 Jun 2020 04:54:18 +0000 https://badsporters.com/?p=7542 Randolph County deputies arrest fugitive wanted in Michigan Updated: 2:08 PM EDT Jun 19, 2020 Hide Transcript Show Transcript THIS AFTERNOON. A GOOD FRIDAY AFTERNOON TO YOU AND HAPPY JUNETEENTH. HAPPENING NOW, THE OWNERS OF ACE SPEEDWAY ARE IN COURT FIGHTI TO REOPEN AMID THIS PANDEMIC. THE STATE SHUT DOWN THE TRACK LAST WEEK SAYING […]

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Randolph County deputies arrest fugitive wanted in Michigan


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THIS AFTERNOON. A GOOD FRIDAY AFTERNOON TO YOU AND HAPPY JUNETEENTH. HAPPENING NOW, THE OWNERS OF ACE SPEEDWAY ARE IN COURT FIGHTI TO REOPEN AMID THIS PANDEMIC. THE STATE SHUT DOWN THE TRACK LAST WEEK SAYING LARGE CROWDS AT THE RACES WERE SPREADING COVID-19. THIS IS A LIVE LOOK INSIDE THE COURTROOM IN GRAHAM WHERE THIS HEARING IS HAPPENING. ATTORNEYS FOR ACE SPEEDWAY’S OWNERS ARE CALLING WITNESSES TO MAKE THEIR CAS A JUDGE GRANTED THE STATE’S REQUEST FOR A TEMPORARY RESTRAINING ORDER LAST WEE THAT MEANS ALL RACES AT ACE SPEEDWAY ARE ON HOLD FOR NOW. THE STATE CALLED THE VENUE AN IMMINENT HAZARD BECAUSE ORGANIZERS LET TOO MANY FANS IN. THE GOVERNOR’S CURRENT ORDER LIMITS OUTDOOR GATHERINGS TO 25 PEOPLE. OUR JUSTIN SHRAIR IS LISTENI INTO THAT HEARING AS WE SPEAK. WE HOPE TO HEAR FROM HIM LATER IN THIS NEWSCAST. A STATE-FUNDED STUDY AT WA FOREST BAPTIST HEALTH SHOWS NEARLY 10% OF PEOPLE TESTED IN NORTH CAROLINA HAVE ANTIBODIES TO THE CORONAVIRUS. DOCTOR JOHN SANDERS IS LEADING THIS STUDY. HE SAYS THE PRESENCE OF ANTIBODIES MEANS THE PEOPLE WERE LIKELY PREVIOUS INFECTED OR OR MAY MAY NOT HAVE HAD SYMPTOMS. SO FAR, ABOUT 5000 PEOPLE HAVE BEEN TESTED. ONLY ABOUT .4% HAVE BEEN IDENTIFIED AS HAVING BEEN INFECTED WITH COVID-19. IN NORTH CAROLINA, GOVERNOR ROY COOPER MAY ISSUE A STATEWIDE MANDATE FOR FACE COVERINGS. THAT PROPOSAL COULD COME NEXT WEEK. ONE FACTOR IN PLAY FOR THAT REQUIREMENT IS THE NUMBER OF HOSPITALIZATIONS. RIGHT NOW, 857 PEOPLE ARE IN THE HOSPITAL FOR COVID-19. HOSPITAL BEDS ARE BEING USED. 3600 ARE EMPTY, BUT STAFFED. AND 2800 BEDS ARE EITHER UNREPORTED OR UNSTAFFED. 1600 ICU BEDS HAVE PATIENT A LITTLE LESS THAN 500 ARE EMPTY. THE STATUS ON MORE THAN A — THAN 1000 ISN’T CLEAR THIS AFTERNOON. HEALTH SECRETARY DOCTOR MANDY COHEN SAYS EVEN THOUGH THERE’S A SEARCH PEOPLE SHOULDN’T STOP GETTING ROUTINE CARE. >> WE WILL CONTINUE TO WATCH THOSE NUMBERS TO SAY, IS THERE A POINT WE MIGHT HAVE TO GO BACK TO A PLACE OF DECREASING ELECTIVE PROCEDURES, COULD WE DO THAT REGIONALLY? WE ARE LOOKING OR ALL OF THE NUMBERS TO MAKE SURE WE WILL CONTINUE TO HAVE HOSPITAL CAPACITY. MEREDITH: WE ARE ALSO EXPECTING UPDATE ON REOPENING NORTH CAROLINA NEXT WEEK. PHASE TWO RESTRICTIONS ARE EXPECTED TO LAST THROUGH NEXT FRIDAY IN JUST A FEW HOURS, RESIDENTS AND VISITORS IN RALEIGH WILL BE REQUIRED TO WEAR FACE COVERINGS. THIS BEGINS AT 4:00 THIS AFTERNOON. MASKS WILL BE REQUIRED IN ANY PUBLIC SPACE, INCLUDING SIDEWALKS. POLICE WON’T ISSUE CITATIONS, BUT FOCUS ON EDUCATION INSTEAD. BOONE’S MASK ORDER START SATURDAY. THERE IS A LIVE LOOK THIS AFTERNOON. THERE FACE COVERINGS ARE REQUIRED IN PUBLIC INDOOR SPACES. OFFICERS ENFORCING THE ORDER WILL GIVE WARNINGS FOR THREE WEEKS BEFORE THEY START HANDING OUT FINES. AS OF RIGHT NOW, FACE COVERINGS ARE STRONGLY RECOMMENDED BUT NOT REQUIRED IN ALL TRIAD CITIES. THE GREENSBORO CITY COUNCIL DISCUSSED A MASK REQUIREMENT AT ITS LAST TWO MEETINGS. BUT ULTIMATELY DECIDED NOT TO VOTE ON THE ISSUE. WINSTON-SALEM’S MAYOR SAYS HE HASN’T FULLY DECIDED WHETHER TO BRING THE ISSUE UP AT THE NEXT CITY COUNCIL MEETING TONIGHT, WXII 12 IS AIRING AN HOUR-LONG SPECIAL ON T CORONAVIRUS IMPACT. IT IS CALLED OUTBREAK, THE FIRST RESPONSE. IT WILL BE HOSTED BY MATTER OF FACT’S SOLEDAD O’BRIEN. WE TAKE A LOOK AT HOW FIRST RESPONSE TEAMS’ DECISIONS DURING THE START OF THIS PANDEMIC. IMPACTED THE COMMUNITY’S ABILITY TO RESPOND TO THIS EMERGENCY. AS WELL AS WHAT LESSONS WE CAN LEARN TO PROTECT THE NATION AND PREVENT FUTURE WAVES OF INFECTION. OUTBREAK, THE FIRST RESPONSE AIRS TONIGHT AT 8:00 ON WXII 12. ♪ HAPPENING NOW, PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP SAYS HE WILL RENEW EFFORTS TO END LEGAL PROTECTIONS FOR YOUNG IMMIGRANTS. THE SUPREME COURT UPHELD THE DACA OR THE DEFERRED ACTION FOR CHILDHOOD ARRIVALS PROGRAM THE PRESIDENT SOUGHT OT END THE PROGRAM, CALLING IT ILLEGAL. IT HAS ALLOWED NEARLY 800,000 SO-CALLED DREAMERS TO STAY IN THE UNITED STATES AND AVOID DEPORTATION. BUT THE JUSTICES DIDN’T PROVIDE A GUARANTEE THAT THOSE YOUNG IMMIGRANTS CAN STAY IN THE U.S. LONG TERM. A MAN IN CHARLOTTE IS ONE OF HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF DREAMERS WHO WILL BE ALLOWED T STAY IN THE U.S. FOR NOW. AT AGE TWO, SANTOS ORTIZ CAME THE UNITED STATES WITH HIS PARENTS, FROM EL SALVADOR, WHO WERE SEEKING GREATER ECONOMIC AND EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES. ORTIZ SAYS THE DACA PROGRAM HAS BEEN HUGELY SIGNIFICANT. >> IN HIGH SCHOOL I WANTED TO GET MY DRIVERS LICENSE, AT A JOB LIKE EVERYONE ELSE THAT I WAS UNABLE TO DO THAT UNTIL DR. CAME OUT AND WE WERE ABLE TO APPLY. IT GAVE ME SO MANY OPPORTUNITIES. I AM ABLE TO GO TO COLLEGE. AND I’M ABLE TO DO INTERESTING FOR BANK OF AMERICA. MEREDITH: ORTIZ SAYS HE HAD STARTED TO TALK WITH HIS EMPLOYERS ABOUT WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF THE RULING WENT THE OTHER WAY. NOW, HE’S BREATHING A HUGE SIGH OF RELIEF. HAPPENING NOW, A 16-YEAR-OLD BOY FROM OAK RIDGE IS RECOVERING AFTER BEING BITTEN BY A SHARK ON THE NORTH CAROLINA COAST. THIS HAPPENED THURSDAY JUST SOUTH OF THE VILLAGE OF SALVO THE OUTER BANKS. THE TEEN’S FAMILY TOLD EMERGENCY CREWS HE WAS JUMPING OVER WAVES ON A SANDBAR AND WAS BITTEN. THE BOY HAD NON-LIFE THREA

Randolph County deputies arrest fugitive wanted in Michigan

The Randolph County Sheriff’s Department arrested a man wanted in Michigan Tuesday.Deputies conducted a traffic stop in the area of Fairlawn Drive and Heathwood Drive, when they determined the passenger, Dereck Allen Budzynski, 29, had outstanding arrest warrants for Guilford and Davidson counties.Deputies also discovered Budzynski was wanted in the state of Michigan for an extraditable offense.Click the video player above for headlines from WXII 12 News.Budzynski was arrested and transported to the Randolph County Detention Center and served the warrants and orders for arrest. He is charged as a fugitive on $130,000 bail.Budzynski’s Michigan charges include:order for fugitive – parole violationBudzynski’s Davidson County charges include:felony obtaining property by false pretensesfelony breaking and/or enteringfelony larceny after breaking/enteringBudzynksi’s Guilford County charges include:2 counts of felony obtaining property by false pretensesfelony breaking and/or enteringfelony larceny after breaking/enteringmisdemeanor larceny

The Randolph County Sheriff’s Department arrested a man wanted in Michigan Tuesday.

Deputies conducted a traffic stop in the area of Fairlawn Drive and Heathwood Drive, when they determined the passenger, Dereck Allen Budzynski, 29, had outstanding arrest warrants for Guilford and Davidson counties.

Deputies also discovered Budzynski was wanted in the state of Michigan for an extraditable offense.

Click the video player above for headlines from WXII 12 News.

Budzynski was arrested and transported to the Randolph County Detention Center and served the warrants and orders for arrest. He is charged as a fugitive on $130,000 bail.

Budzynski’s Michigan charges include:

  • order for fugitive – parole violation

Budzynski’s Davidson County charges include:

  • felony obtaining property by false pretenses
  • felony breaking and/or entering
  • felony larceny after breaking/entering

Budzynksi’s Guilford County charges include:

  • 2 counts of felony obtaining property by false pretenses
  • felony breaking and/or entering
  • felony larceny after breaking/entering
  • misdemeanor larceny

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Report: Michigan State University basketball player accused of sexual assault https://www.badsporters.com/2020/04/24/report-michigan-state-university-basketball-player-accused-of-sexual-assault/ https://www.badsporters.com/2020/04/24/report-michigan-state-university-basketball-player-accused-of-sexual-assault/#respond Fri, 24 Apr 2020 13:40:20 +0000 https://badsporters.com/?p=5505 EAST LANSING, Mich. – A woman who said she was sexually assaulted by a Michigan State basketball player is asking the Michigan attorney general’s office to investigate, according to a published report. ESPN, citing a police report and emails obtained through a public records request, reported that Michigan State University police told prosecutors they had […]

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EAST LANSING, Mich. – A woman who said she was sexually assaulted by a Michigan State basketball player is asking the Michigan attorney general’s office to investigate, according to a published report.

ESPN, citing a police report and emails obtained through a public records request, reported that Michigan State University police told prosecutors they had probable cause that sophomore guard Brock Washington raped the woman on Jan. 19 while she was too intoxicated to consent. Police referred the case to county prosecutors, who declined to file charges this month.

An MSU police spokesman told ESPN on Monday that the attorney general’s office requested the case file and the department was cooperating.

After a loss at Indiana on Jan. 23, coach Tom Izzo told reporters that Washington had been suspended. He did not elaborate.

Washington did not play again this season. He played a total of 19 minutes this season before the suspension.

A team spokesman did not immediately return a message from The Associated Press seeking comment Monday. The AP also left messages with the MSU police.

ESPN said it attempted to reach Washington and his current attorney. A previous attorney, Peter Samouris, said he wasn’t familiar with this case but that he spoke with Washington and Washington’s father last week.

“It’s my understanding he’s not going to be charged, and he doesn’t wish to speak,” Samouris told ESPN. “He’s maintained his innocence 100% of the time.”

Ingham County Prosecutor Carol Siemon said in a statement to ESPN that she did not charge Washington because the case “does not meet the burden of proof that we must present to a jury.”

The woman told ESPN she met with an assistant prosecutor earlier this month and was told that she had been “too intoxicated to prove that it (sexual contact) was forced.”

“That was the whole point of the charge, that I was too drunk to consent to what happened,” the woman said. “The prosecutor failed me completely.”

The woman told ESPN she requested that the AG’s office investigate her case.

ESPN, citing police records and an unidentified source, said Washington pleaded guilty to misdemeanor assault in 2018 — under a provision allowing offenders to plead guilty without a court entering a judgment of conviction. A female student reported that Washington forcibly groped her on Aug. 29, 2017, according to ESPN.

Michigan State has been at the center of several high-profile sexual assault claims in recent years. The school was rocked by the sexual abuse scandal involving sports doctor Larry Nassar, and several basketball and football players have been accused of misconduct as well.

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Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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Michigan AG asked to reopen Mich. St. rape case https://www.badsporters.com/2020/04/24/michigan-ag-asked-to-reopen-mich-st-rape-case/ https://www.badsporters.com/2020/04/24/michigan-ag-asked-to-reopen-mich-st-rape-case/#respond Fri, 24 Apr 2020 13:11:40 +0000 https://badsporters.com/?p=5493 A woman who told police that she was sexually assaulted by a Michigan State basketball player asked the Michigan attorney general’s office last week to investigate her case after local prosecutors declined to file charges. Michigan State University police told prosecutors that they had probable cause that Spartans sophomore basketball player Brock Washington raped the […]

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A woman who told police that she was sexually assaulted by a Michigan State basketball player asked the Michigan attorney general’s office last week to investigate her case after local prosecutors declined to file charges.

Michigan State University police told prosecutors that they had probable cause that Spartans sophomore basketball player Brock Washington raped the woman on Jan. 19 while she was too intoxicated to consent, according to a police report and emails obtained by ESPN via a public records request to the Ingham County prosecutor’s office. Police referred the case to county prosecutors, who declined to file charges this month.

A spokesman for Michigan State University police told ESPN Monday that the attorney general’s office has requested the case file and that the department is cooperating.

Washington, who two years ago pleaded guilty to misdemeanor assault stemming from a separate sex crime investigation, was suspended without explanation by Michigan State coach Tom Izzo in late January. During questioning by police in the most recent case, Washington changed his story about the night in question several times, acknowledged that the woman was so drunk that she was incapacitated and admitted to police that he had sexual contact with her, according to the police report.

“While Mr. Washington will not try this case in the media, he also will not stand by silently while falsehoods are spoken about him,” Mary Chartier, a lawyer representing Washington, said in a statement emailed to ESPN Thursday. “He vehemently denies these false allegations, and we are prepared to fight these claims to the fullest.”

Ingham County Prosecutor Carol Siemon issued a statement to ESPN saying that she declined to charge Washington because the case “does not meet the burden of proof that we must present to a jury.”

The woman, who spoke to ESPN on the condition of anonymity, said that on March 11 she met with assistant prosecuting attorney Sarah Pulda and was told that she had been “too intoxicated to prove that it [sexual contact] was forced.”

The statement shocked and angered the woman: “That was the whole point of the charge, that I was too drunk to consent to what happened,” she said. “The prosecutor failed me completely. I have to take it into my own hands … and hopefully get justice in the long run.”

Michigan law states that someone can be charged and found guilty of criminal sexual conduct if the alleged perpetrator “engages in sexual penetration with another person” and “causes personal injury to the victim, and the actor knows or has reason to know that the victim is mentally incapable, mentally incapacitated, or physically helpless.”

“[Pulda] recommended that I read my police report to help put my mind to ease,” the woman wrote in a letter she sent Thursday to the AG’s office, which she shared with ESPN. “After reading it, my mind is the complete opposite, and my trust in the justice system is completely diminished.”

Although her letter does not explicitly ask state officials to reopen the investigation, she told ESPN that she corresponded with an assistant attorney general and requested that the office investigate her case.

Pulda did not respond to requests for an interview. A spokeswoman for the attorney general said she could not confirm that a letter had been received.

“Many, many cases fall into areas where we believe that an individual was indeed sexually assaulted, but also believe that we are unable to meet the burden of proof due to the nuances of statute and jury instructions,” Siemon told ESPN in an email Monday, in which she said she was sharing general thoughts about “sexual assault and culture change” not specific to the Washington case. She also said that “it troubles both Sarah [Pulda] and [her] so much” that she spoke about the “ongoing issue” and “laws dealing with consent” with her state senator earlier this month.

Michigan State University police recommended charging Washington with first-degree criminal sexual conduct after interviewing him, the woman, her roommate who was with her the night of the alleged incident and an Uber driver who took her home, according to the police report. Police also recommended charging the woman’s roommate with obstructing a criminal investigation after she changed her story the second time she was interviewed by police. The prosecutor has not filed charges against the roommate.

The woman who accused Washington said she has been in contact with Michigan State’s office of institutional equity, and a Title IX investigation is ongoing. A spokeswoman for the university declined to comment on the investigation. The woman is not a student at Michigan State but attends a nearby college. Washington remains enrolled at Michigan State and remained suspended from the team for the duration of its season, the spokeswoman said.

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In her interview with police, the woman said she and her roommate met Washington at an East Lansing bar on Jan. 18, and both went to his apartment in the early-morning hours of Jan. 19. The woman told police that Washington began pouring shots of Jack Daniels whiskey for the three of them, and other basketball players arrived later. The woman, who was first interviewed by police on Jan. 19, said she remembers taking one shot, but her roommate later told her she took several, according to the report.

She told police that she vaguely remembers then going into Washington’s bedroom with Washington and her roommate. “[The woman] said she completely blacked out after that,” according to the police report.

The woman said she woke up at 9:30 a.m. Jan. 19 in her apartment and noticed that she was still wearing her leggings but was not wearing any underwear, according to the report. She told police that she searched her apartment and could not find her underwear. She said she also noticed dried blood in her leggings and blood in her vagina, though she was not menstruating at the time.

Because she said she was not able to remember much of anything that happened, she consulted her roommate, who told her that “[the woman] was completely unresponsive at the party and had to be carried out of Washington’s apartment to the Uber, then the Uber driver had to carry [the woman] up to their apartment,” according to the report.

Security camera footage reviewed by police shows Washington, the woman and her roommate entering his apartment building at 1:05 a.m. and two of Washington’s teammates entering about 50 minutes later. One of the teammates told police that when he and the other player arrived at Washington’s apartment, he at first didn’t realize the women were there and became aware of them only when they were trying to leave. At 2:41 a.m., the footage shows the woman, her roommate and one of Washington’s teammates walking through the building’s elevator lobby and stepping outside, according to the report. The woman “doubles over and appears to vomit for a while” and is uncoordinated in her movements, according to the report. Twelve minutes later, the player picks her up, cradles her in his arms and carries her out of the building, the report shows, “and she does not appear to be moving at this time.” Police interviewed both of the other teammates, but neither has been accused of any wrongdoing.

The Uber driver who took the woman and her roommate back to their apartment told police that he did not believe the woman could have been responsible for her actions or decision-making, based on how intoxicated she was, according to the report. “If she [the woman] would have been by herself, there was no way I was gonna take her. Or I would have taken her to the hospital. I thought she was that drunk,” the driver told police.

The woman initially resisted having a full sexual assault exam at the hospital on Jan. 19.

When a police officer reached her the next day, the officer told the woman that Washington had previously been investigated for sexual assault and that, the officer wrote, “I want to be able to keep other people safe from that same situation.” The woman then agreed to a full Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner exam, which was administered Jan. 20.

The woman’s sexual assault exam did not find, or was inconclusive for, evidence of male DNA. The nurse who administered the exam noted bruising on the woman’s body and “observed dry blood still present, which rubbed off on a vaginal swab.”

In a Jan. 21 interview with police, the woman said she noticed bruising on her hip, right shoulder and wrists, on which she also noted that some of the skin had been “rubbed off,” according to the report.

Police interviewed the woman’s roommate on Jan. 21. The roommate said that after taking shots of whiskey at Washington’s apartment, Washington showed both women his bedroom, according to the report. The roommate told police that they sat on his bed, and the roommate laid back, “resting her eyes.” The roommate said she didn’t know how long she was resting — it felt like a second, she said — before she heard the woman asking her if they could go home, according to the report. The roommate said the woman at that moment was on the floor, and Washington was still in the room and offered to call an Uber to take them home, according to the police report. The roommate said “she did not feel like it was a long period of time that she was resting, but she does not know how long it actually was,” according to the report.

The roommate said she left the room briefly, returned and saw Washington trying to get the woman up off the floor, but she “had no strength,” according to the report. “[The roommate] stated she has gone out drinking with [the woman] many times and knows she drinks more than her, but she stated she has never seen [the woman] to the point where she could not stand up and had no strength,” the report states.

When police asked the roommate why the woman went home without her underwear, the roommate said, “Maybe she was bleeding from something and she took her underwear off in the bathroom at the bar,” according to the report.

In an interview with ESPN, the woman said she knew something was wrong when she woke up and her underwear was missing. “I was so confused. I’ve drank before, but this has never happened,” she said. Not having her underwear, she said, didn’t make sense. She looked all over her apartment, even searching pockets of coats she hadn’t worn in a long time. She woke up in the middle of the night and searched then, too.

“I needed to find some logical reason in order to think that this didn’t happen to me,” she said. “If I found them, then it would give me some clarity that nothing like that took place.”

Police executed a search warrant for Washington’s apartment on Jan. 21 and found the woman’s underwear in a clothes hamper in his bedroom.

Washington voluntarily talked to police on Jan. 21. He said that he, the roommate and the woman had gone into his bedroom, and he called an Uber for the woman when he realized how intoxicated she was. When the officer asked why police would have found the woman’s underwear in his hamper, Washington said he “didn’t do anything” with her, but he and the roommate “kissed a little bit,” according to the report. “When we saw that [the woman] wasn’t good, we … we made sure to, to stop everything and [unintelligible] and called the Uber and made sure she was … made sure they got home,” he told police.

Washington changed his story after a detective questioned him further and asked whether his DNA would be found in the results of the woman’s sexual assault exam. Washington said, “I mean, we might … from what I remember we might have gone further. But everything was before she … it hit her,” according to the report. Washington also told police that both women had oral sex with him, the report shows.

Police told Washington that the woman noticed blood on herself and had sore wrists and a sore shoulder, and that “a lot of things did not add up,” according to the report. Washington then said, “We were planning on doing stuff, and, like, but, it never happened. When me and [the roommate] saw that she was too messed up to do anything, we put her clothes back on, I guess that’s why … I guess we didn’t get the underwear back on,” according to the report.

The officer advised Washington that he was telling her something he hadn’t previously said, and “this would be his opportunity to tell the truth,” according to the report. Washington said that in the car on the way to his apartment, one of the women suggested they have a threesome, according to the report.

Washington said he wore a condom while having sex with the roommate; the officer asked about the woman. “I do not remember having sex with [the woman]. But I might have had sex with her too,” he told police. The officer pressed further, and according to the report, Washington said he stopped having sex with one of the women when he switched to having vaginal sex with the other. Because the women’s names are redacted in the report, it’s unclear which woman Washington referred to first.

In her second interview with police on Jan. 28, the roommate said she didn’t completely remember what happened in the bedroom, but she ended up on the floor and “something happened,” according to the report. She nodded when asked if she and the woman were having oral sex with Washington, and when asked if Washington had intercourse with the woman, the roommate said, “No, I don’t remember him doing anything like that.”

The roommate admitted to not being truthful in her initial interview, and the officer told her “she needs to be aware that her actions may have consequences.”

In a follow-up interview with police on Jan. 28, the woman who accused Washington expressed shock and anger at the fact that Washington admitted to having sex with her and that her roommate was aware that some “sexual activity” occurred. The woman stated, “I want to report it,” and later told an advocate who came to the police interview with her, “Don’t let me drop it.”

That was also the day when she learned police had found her underwear, which she told ESPN she had continued to search for in her apartment.

“I was relieved, but also I knew what that meant … I just broke down,” she said. “That’s when I heard he admitted he had sex with me, then heard that [her roommate] was a foot away and was lying about it and didn’t do anything for two weeks. That was definitely the worst day.”

After the Spartans lost to Indiana on Jan. 23, Izzo ended his postgame media conference by saying, “If you looked at our bench, I did not travel Brock Washington. I suspended him. There’s nothing more I’m going to say about it, but I did suspend him. So he’s at home and will be suspended.” No reporters present at the media conference asked a follow-up question, and Izzo got up and left without saying more.

In 2017, Washington was named the lone suspect in an alleged assault that Michigan State University police classified as fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct after a female student reported that Washington forcibly groped her on Aug. 29, 2017, at a residence hall.

In early 2018, Washington, who was 18 at the time, pleaded guilty to misdemeanor assault, according to police records and a source with knowledge of the information. He pleaded under a provision in Michigan law that allows offenders ages 17 through 23 to plead guilty without a court entering a judgment of conviction, essentially keeping the crime off the public record and dismissing the case as long as terms of a probation are fulfilled.

Washington suited up for every game in the 2017-18 Spartans basketball season but did not receive any playing time.

After ESPN reported in February 2018 that Washington was under investigation for criminal sexual conduct, Michigan State then-interim president John Engler criticized the reporting, saying: “The sad thing is, I think we should, probably as a Michigan State community, apologize to this young man and his family who has been named without, at least in that report, any evidence of any wrongdoing.”

Izzo, Michigan State’s athletic department and the university as a whole have been under scrutiny in part because of an Outside the Lines investigation published Jan. 26, 2018. The investigation found a pattern of widespread denial, inaction and information suppression of sexual assault, violence and gender discrimination complaints by officials ranging from campus police to the Michigan State athletic department. The report revealed not previously known police reports and allegations of sexual or violent incidents involving members of the Michigan State football team and Izzo’s storied basketball program.

Earlier this year, the Michigan Attorney General’s office took over the criminal investigation of a report a woman made to police last year, alleging that she was raped by three basketball players in 2015, after the Lansing Township police department determined that it did not have the resources to investigate the case. A Michigan State Title IX investigation, started in 2018 and finished last year, did not find the then-former players responsible for violating the school’s sexual misconduct policies. The attorney general’s investigation into that report is ongoing, and the woman has a pending Title IX gender equity federal lawsuit against the school.

Paula Lavigne is a reporter and Nicole Noren is a producer in ESPN’s investigative unit.

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Michigan AG https://www.badsporters.com/2020/04/21/michigan-ag/ https://www.badsporters.com/2020/04/21/michigan-ag/#respond Tue, 21 Apr 2020 02:14:25 +0000 https://badsporters.com/?p=5396 CLOSE SportsPulse: David Krichavsky, Senior VP of Youth Basketball Development for the NBA, explains a recent initiative aimed at keeping kids active and fit despite being home during the coronavirus outbreak. USA TODAY LANSING — The Michigan Attorney General’s office has asked to review the criminal investigation into a sexual assault complaint against a Michigan State University basketball […]

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SportsPulse: David Krichavsky, Senior VP of Youth Basketball Development for the NBA, explains a recent initiative aimed at keeping kids active and fit despite being home during the coronavirus outbreak.

USA TODAY

LANSING — The Michigan Attorney General’s office has asked to review the criminal investigation into a sexual assault complaint against a Michigan State University basketball player, according to a university official.  

Michigan State University Police Department Capt. Doug Monette confirmed the investigation involved a basketball player and said his office provided the file to the AG. 

The Detroit Free Press typically does not identify persons accused of crimes until charges are filed.

AG spokesperson Kelly Rossman-McKinney said an assistant Attorney General received an inquiry about looking into the case, but has made no decisions or recommendations. She said because of COVID-19, it’ll likely be a few weeks before the legal team can review the case. 

A sign at the Michigan State University campus in East Lansing, Michigan. (Photo: Derrick L. Turner, LSJ file photo)

The Ingham County Prosecutor’s Office declined to file charges against the player because the case did not meet the burden of proof needed to try it in front of a jury, Prosecutor Carol Siemon said in an emailed statement to the Lansing State Journal. 

“We believe that every complaint of sexual assault should be investigated, and that every investigation should be reviewed by a prosecutor,” Siemon said. “It was the consensus of our prosecution team that the case could not be proven in court as required under law. As the County Prosecutor, ultimately I am the official who reports directly to the people of Ingham County. I have determined that the case does not meet the burden of proof that we must present to a jury.”

The reported sexual assault took place Jan. 19 in the 400 block of Ivy Court in East Lansing. Siemon said her office received the police report in February.

The player was suspended Jan. 24 by the team and no reason was given for the suspension.

NCAA: All spring-sports athletes can receive extra year of eligibility

OPINION: Devil is in the details with NCAA’s spring-sports eligibility rules

SPORTS SHUTDOWN: Latest news on sports’ coronavirus shutdown delivered to you. Sign up here.

The Lansing State Journal requested the police report Feb. 24 from MSU police and the university records office has said it is still in the process of redacting it. That same day, the Ingham County Prosecutor’s Office denied an LSJ public records request for emails involving the player between the university police department and county prosecutors.

MSU also said there was no email correspondence with anyone at the MSU police department and top basketball officials. 

The player was charged in March 2018 with misdemeanor assault. He pleaded guilty to the charge, but his case is not public because he pleaded under the Holmes Youthful Trainee Act, which allows offenders ages 17 to 24 to have a non-public conviction as long as the terms of their probation are satisfied. 

The assault charge generally carries up to 93 days in jail, but it is not clear if the player was sentenced to jail or was given probation. 

Contact reporter Kara Berg at 517-377-1113 or kberg@lsj.com. Follow her on Twitter @karaberg95.

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Student accuses 3 Michigan State basketball players of raping her in 2015 https://www.badsporters.com/2018/04/10/student-accuses-3-michigan-state-basketball-players-of-raping-her-in-2015/ https://www.badsporters.com/2018/04/10/student-accuses-3-michigan-state-basketball-players-of-raping-her-in-2015/#respond Tue, 10 Apr 2018 16:12:28 +0000 http://www.badsporters.com/?p=3457 A sign for Michigan State University is seen near the campus in East Lansing, Mich., in February. (Rebecca Cook/Reuters) A Michigan State University student has accused three prominent Spartans basketball players of raping her in an off-campus apartment in 2015 and said campus counselors discouraged her from reporting the sexual assaults to police, according to a federal lawsuit filed […]

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A sign for Michigan State University is seen near the campus in East Lansing, Mich., in February. (Rebecca Cook/Reuters)

A Michigan State University student has accused three prominent Spartans basketball players of raping her in an off-campus apartment in 2015 and said campus counselors discouraged her from reporting the sexual assaults to police, according to a federal lawsuit filed Monday.

The female student, who was not named in the lawsuit, accused the university of creating “an environment where football and basketball players can sexually assault females without repercussion.”

“MSU has fostered a culture in which female victims are discouraged from reporting sexual assaults when those assaults are perpetrated by male athletes, thus protecting the university, the male athletics programs, and the male athletes at the expense of the female victims.”

The Title IX lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Michigan, does not name the three basketball players or the counselors who allegedly deterred the female student from contacting police. University officials could not immediately be reached for comment by The Washington Post. Emily Guerrant, university spokeswoman and vice president, told the Detroit Free Press on Monday the university does not comment on pending litigation

The young woman’s allegations come amid an ongoing sexual assault scandal involving Larry Nassar, the former Michigan State and USA Gymnastics doctor accused by more than 250 girls and women of sexual abuse.

The Michigan attorney general’s office is investigating the role others at the school may have played in crimes committed by Nassar, who is spending the rest of his life in prison. His former boss, the former dean of Michigan State’s school of osteopathic medicine, William Strampel, was arrested late last month on charges of sexually assaulting and harassing four female students and mishandling a sexual assault complaint against Nassar.

A number of university officials, including former president Lou Anna Simon, have resigned in the wake of the scandals.

The university is also under investigation by state lawmakers, Congress and the U.S. Department of Education and has faced a string of sexual assault allegations against football and basketball players in recent years.

The unnamed woman who sued Michigan State on Monday was an 18-year-old freshman student and aspiring sports journalist on the night she was allegedly raped.

On the evening of April 11, 2015, the student and her roommate were at a bar in East Lansing when members of the basketball team walked in, the suit alleges. The team had just returned to campus days earlier after being eliminated from the NCAA tournament by Duke University.

After midnight, one of the players offered to buy the young woman a drink, she said. Because of her interest in sports journalism, she accepted. But at no time during the night did she indicate a “romantic interest” in any of the team members, the lawsuit states.

One of the players then invited her to a party at his apartment, leading her to believe her roommate was also going. The 18-year-old agreed and accepted a ride to the off-campus apartment from two of the players.

Before she left the bar she was already having a hard time holding onto her glass, the lawsuit states, even though “she had not had a lot to drink.”

When she arrived at the apartment, she realized her roommate was not there. “There was no party” the lawsuit stated, “as few people were present.” She became extremely hungry and thirsty and was “feeling discombobulated,” according to the lawsuit. “She tried to send a phone text, but she could not control her thumbs to formulate a text.” She began to wonder if she might have been drugged.

One of the players then pulled her into a bedroom and told her “you are mine for the night.” Feeling uncomfortable, she managed to leave the bedroom and head back to the living room. But another player, who lived in the apartment, later asked her if she wanted to see some of his basketball memorabilia.

She was drinking a glass of water when suddenly “the room went dark,” according to the lawsuit. The basketball player allegedly threw her on the bed, pinning her face down so she could not move. He then allegedly raped her from behind while she cried, unable to move or speak, according to the lawsuit.

Two other players, including the one who earlier said “you are mine for the night,” then allegedly took turns raping her, the lawsuit says. The young woman blacked out and woke up on a couch in the apartment hours later. She called a taxi and went to her dorm room “distraught, traumatized, and crying.”

She went to the campus counseling center the following week, according to the suit. When she told a female counselor that she was raped by three university basketball players, the counselor brought another person into the room with them, according to the lawsuit. It was not clear why, or who the person was.

A counseling staff member told the student she could either file a police report or cope with what happened on her own, according to the lawsuit. But she made the student believe it would not be in her best interest to report the alleged rape, as it would create unwanted anxiety, the lawsuit says.

“If you pursue this, you are going to be swimming with some really big fish,” a staff member told her, according to the lawsuit. The counseling staff at no point encouraged her to seek testing for sexually transmitted disease or pregnancy testing, the lawsuit says, and they did not advise her on how to report the rape to the university’s Office of Institutional Equity. She never learned of her right to ask for a no-contact order to keep the three men away from her dorm, according to the lawsuit.

The woman told ESPN’s Outside the Lines that she did not contact police in 2015 because she and some of her underage friends had used fake IDs to get into the bar the night of the alleged rape. Speaking with ESPN on condition that she not be identified, she said she worried they would be charged with underage drinking, and counseling staff did nothing to ease those concerns.

By October, she had become so “traumatized, depressed, and withdrawn” that she was admitted to an outpatient psychiatric day-program and stopped attending her classes, she said in the lawsuit. Eventually she was forced to withdraw for the semester.

She resumed classes in January 2016 but changed her major, “as her dream of becoming a sports journalist had been destroyed,” the lawsuit said.

“Everyone I was in classes with or working with was just all into sports, like ‘bleed green,’” the student told ESPN’s Outside the Lines. “I’m thinking to myself, ‘If only you could look at them like I have to. If only you knew what it felt like.’”

Her attorney, Karen Truszkowski, told Outside the Lines that her client has not reported the incident to police, but “I cannot say that she’s not ever going to report it.”

The lawsuit follows investigations by both ESPN and the Detroit Free Press that found a string of sexual assault complaints involving Michigan State football and basketball players in recent years and a pattern of inaction and information suppression by university officials.

At least 16 Michigan State football players have been accused of sexual assault or violence against women since Mark Dantonio became head coach in 2007, according to an ESPN investigation. Three former football players pleaded guilty last week to reduced charges in the 2017 sexual assault of a woman in an apartment bathroom.

This is the third time since 2010 that multiple Michigan State basketball players have been accused of raping a woman, according to the Detroit Free Press. Last month, a freshman walk-on basketball player, Brock Washington, was arrested on a misdemeanor assault charge. He had been under investigation for fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct, according to the Free Press.

More from Morning Mix:

Molly Ringwald reckons with ‘The Breakfast Club’ in the #MeToo era

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Michigan State: Breaking down 3 multi-player rape allegations since 2010? https://www.badsporters.com/2018/04/10/michigan-state-breaking-down-3-multi-player-rape-allegations-since-2010/ https://www.badsporters.com/2018/04/10/michigan-state-breaking-down-3-multi-player-rape-allegations-since-2010/#respond Tue, 10 Apr 2018 13:16:57 +0000 http://www.badsporters.com/?p=3451 Detroit Free Press Published 8:16 p.m. ET April 9, 2018 | Updated 8:33 p.m. ET April 9, 2018 People March along Grand River in East Lansing in January on the Michigan State University campus in East Lansing while speaking out against sexual assault following the Larry Nassar case.(Photo: Ryan Garza, Detroit Free Press) On Monday, […]

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Detroit Free Press
Published 8:16 p.m. ET April 9, 2018 | Updated 8:33 p.m. ET April 9, 2018

On Monday, a lawsuit filed in federal court alleged three Michigan State basketball players of raping a student in 2015, a week after the Final Four loss to Duke, and accused the university of coercing the woman not to report it to authorities. 

The case, which was filed in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Michigan Southern Division, alleges three unnamed players — identified only as John Doe 1, 2 and 3 — took the 18-year-old student Jane Doe home from an East Lansing bar between the evening of April 11, 2015 and the morning of April 12.

The suit is the latest black eye for a university and a basketball program under fire for its handling of allegations of sexual assault and violent acts against women. It’s also the third allegation of rape by multiple MSU basketball players since 2010. Only one of those incidents were reported to police. 

Here’s a look at the three incidents: 

More: Michigan State basketball coach Tom Izzo delivers fiery defense of himself, program

 April 2010: According to an ESPN Outside the Lines report, former Michigan State basketball player Travis Walton and two unnamed players from the Spartans’ 2010 Final Four team allegedly sexually assaulted a woman off campus. ESPN reported the alleged gang rape was never reported to police or the university’s Title IX office, but the network said the victim and her family reported it to athletic director Mark Hollis, who told them he would conduct his own investigation.

Walton, who was a student assistant during the 2009-10 season, admitted he knew the unnamed woman and had a relationship with her. He denied raping her. 

“My encounters with this woman were more than just a single occasion, and my actions with her were always consensual,” Walton wrote in his statement.

More: Michigan State, Mark Dantonio and a cloud of sexual assaults

August 2010: According to records obtained by the Free Press, former Michigan State players Keith Appling and Adreian Payne were accused of sexually assaulting a woman during the fall of their freshman year in 2010. Then-Ingham County Prosecutor Stuart Dunnings III declined to press charges in the matter, saying no crime was committed and citing insufficient evidence. 

More: Michigan State walk-on Brock Washington arrested, charged with assault

2015: The latest suit came just shy of five months before the federal Office for Civil Rights (OCR) determined MSU’s handling of some Title IX cases had created a “hostile environment” for individuals who complained about relationship violence or sexual misconduct. OCR found there was confusion in MSU’s athletic department about who should report sexual assault claims to the university’s investigation office. 

The woman in the case never reported the alleged sexual assault to police, said Karen Truszkowski, the woman’s attorney. But according to the lawsuit, the woman did report the incident to a counselor at the Michigan State University Counseling Center, which she claims failed to properly advise her and even implied it would not be in her “best interest to report the incident to law enforcement.”

 

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Lawsuit: 3 Michigan State basketball players raped woman in 2015 https://www.badsporters.com/2018/04/09/lawsuit-3-michigan-state-basketball-players-raped-woman-in-2015-2/ https://www.badsporters.com/2018/04/09/lawsuit-3-michigan-state-basketball-players-raped-woman-in-2015-2/#respond Mon, 09 Apr 2018 23:51:06 +0000 http://www.badsporters.com/?p=3426 Guests enter the Spartan Engagement Center in the Demmer Family Pavilion on Monday, Aug. 25, 2014 during a tour of the new North End Zone Complex renovations at Spartan Stadium in East Lansing on the Michigan State Campus.(Photo: Ryan Garza/Detroit Free Press) Three Michigan State basketball players raped a student in 2015, one week after […]

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Three Michigan State basketball players raped a student in 2015, one week after the Final Four loss to Duke, and the university coerced the woman not to report it to authorities, according to a federal lawsuit filed Monday.

The case, which was filed in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Michigan Southern Division, alleges three unnamed players — identified only as John Doe 1, 2 and 3 — took the 18-year-old student, Jane Doe, home from an East Lansing bar between the evening of April 11, 2015 and the morning of April 12.

The woman never reported the alleged sexual assault to police, said Karen Truszkowski, the woman’s attorney. But according to the lawsuit, the woman did report the incident to a counselor at the Michigan State University Counseling Center, which she claims failed to properly advise her and even implied it would not be in her “best interest to report the incident to law enforcement.”

According to MSU’s policy on relationship violence and sexual misconduct, counselors generally are not permitted to report allegations of rape or relationship violence to the Title IX office or police. 

“I think the complaint kind of speaks for itself,” Truszkowski said, declining further comment.

Sparty statue on the campus of Michigan State University in East Lansing, Mich. (Photo: Rod Sanford, AP)

More Michigan State:

Tom Izzo delivers fiery defense of himself, Michigan State basketball

Michigan State, Mark Dantonio and a cloud of sexual assault

Michigan State walk-on Brock Washington arrested, charged with assault

It wasn’t immediately clear Monday if MSU coach Tom Izzo or anyone in the MSU athletic department was notified about the allegations. 

The suit is the latest black eye for a university and a basketball program under fire for its handling of allegations of sexual assault and violent acts against women. It’s also the third allegation of multiple MSU basketball players raping a woman since 2010. Only one of those incidents were reported to police.

In 2015, the federal Office for Civil Rights determined MSU’s handling of some Title IX cases had created a “hostile environment” for individuals who complained about relationship violence or sexual misconduct and found there was confusion in MSU’s athletic department about who should report sexual assault claims to the university’s investigation office.

Emily Guerrant, MSU’s vice president and university spokesperson, said Monday the university does not comment on pending litigation. A message for the MSU athletic department was not immediately returned.

The woman, who remains a student at MSU, alleges she was at Harper’s Bar when the Spartans’ basketball team arrived after midnight. One of the players offered to buy her a drink and asked if she would like to meet “other guys” from the team. The woman, who was a sports journalism major, alleges one of the players then invited her to a party at an apartment and one player “lied” and told the woman her roommate was on her way to the party.

The lawsuit says the woman was having a difficult time holding her glass, though she said she did not have a lot to drink. She then accepted a ride to the party from two players — the party was at one of their off-campus apartments — and there was no party and her roommate was not there.

The lawsuit alleges the woman “was feeling discombobulated” and tried to send a text but could not control her thumbs and believed she may have been drugged. Then the first player allegedly pulled her into a bedroom and told her, “You are mine for the night.”

After the woman asked for water and to see basketball memorabilia, the second player then took her to another room when the lights went out.

According to the lawsuit, the woman said she was forcefully thrown face-down onto the bed and held so she could not move while the second player raped her from behind. The woman was crying and could not speak, her lawsuit claims, and she did not consent to the activity.

The lawsuit alleges the first player and a third player took turns raping her after the second player finished. The woman claims she does not remember anything until waking up on a couch a few hours later, then called a taxi back to her dorm. There, her roommate told her she did not know about a party.

The woman reported the rape to a counselor at the Michigan State University Counseling Center on April 20, 2015, and completed an initial intake and assessment. When she disclosed to the counselor the three men who allegedly raped her were MSU basketball players, the female counselor’s demeanor reportedly changed and she told the alleged victim she needed another person in the room with them. According to the lawsuit, it was not clear who the additional person was or why they were brought into the room.

It was not immediately clear Monday if bringing the extra person into the room violated federal health and wellness privacy laws. 

DOCUMENTS

According to the lawsuit, the MSU Counseling Center staffers then “made it clear to Plaintiff that if she chose to notify the police, she faced an uphill battle that would create anxiety and unwanted media attention and publicity as had happened with many other female students who were sexually assaulted by well-known athletes.” The staff members, per the court filing, then advised the woman they had seen a lot of these cases with “guys with big names” and the best thing to do is to “just get yourself better” implying to the woman it would not be in her best interest to report the incident to law enforcement.

The woman’s suit claims she was not advised to have a physical exam, seek medical treatment or have STD or pregnancy tests. It also alleges she was not notified of her federal Title IX rights, protections, and accommodations.

“Plaintiff was expressly told by MSUCC staff that ‘if you pursue this, you are going to be swimming with some really big fish,’ ” the lawsuit alleges.

The lawsuit says the woman then became “frightened” and did not report the alleged rape to either police or MSU’s Office of Institutional Equity. She also did not file a no-contact order and claims she was not advised by the university’s counselors of that option.

According to the lawsuit, the woman in October 2015 “had become so traumatized, depressed, and withdrawn to the point that she was admitted to the Sparrow Hospital outpatient psychiatric dayprogram for intensive psychiatric treatment.” She withdrew from classes that semester and, according to the lawsuit, explained to university officials she had been raped and was suffering from the trauma.

The lawsuit adds the university did not offer the woman academic assistance and was not referred to the Title IX office.

The woman resumed classes in January 2016 and changed her major. She sought private psychiatric care in February 2016 and remains on prescribed medication, according to the lawsuit.

Michigan State has been under intense scrutiny for its handling of Title IX cases and violent acts against women, including its suppression of some of Larry Nassar’s victims. But the issues have extended past Nassar, the disgraced former MSU sports medicine doctor who abused victims under the guise of medical treatment. 

A Free Press investigation in January found three unreported sexual assault allegations in MSU’s football program, bringing the total to six cases of sexual assault involving 11 players during Mark Dantonio’s first 11 seasons. All but two of those cases, both of which occurred in 2017, were dismissed by then-Ingham County Prosecutor Stuart Dunnings III.

An ESPN report, also in January, alleged ex-MSU player Travis Walton and two unnamed players sexually assaulted a woman in April 2010, with a letter claiming then-athletic director Mark Hollis said he would personally investigate the allegations. There was no police report filed in that case, and any resolution is unclear. Walton has denied the claim.

In August 2010, MSU players Adreian Payne and Keith Appling were accused of raping a woman. Dunnings said no crime was committed and did not press charges.

On March 8, current MSU basketball player Brock Washington was arrested on a misdemeanor assault charge, according to state police records. The freshman walk-on had been under investigation for fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct.

Hollis resigned Jan. 26, hours before the Free Press and ESPN reports were published. On Jan. 23, the NCAA sent the university a letter of inquiry to begin an investigation into the athletic department’s handling of the Nassar case. The letter cited two NCAA bylaws on “The Commitment to Student-Athlete Well-Being” and “Health and Safety.” 

 

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Lawsuit: 3 Michigan State basketball players raped woman in 2015 https://www.badsporters.com/2018/04/09/lawsuit-3-michigan-state-basketball-players-raped-woman-in-2015/ https://www.badsporters.com/2018/04/09/lawsuit-3-michigan-state-basketball-players-raped-woman-in-2015/#respond Mon, 09 Apr 2018 22:40:22 +0000 http://www.badsporters.com/?p=3423 Guests enter the Spartan Engagement Center in the Demmer Family Pavilion on Monday, Aug. 25, 2014 during a tour of the new North End Zone Complex renovations at Spartan Stadium in East Lansing on the Michigan State Campus.(Photo: Ryan Garza/Detroit Free Press) Three Michigan State basketball players raped a student in 2015, one week after […]

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Three Michigan State basketball players raped a student in 2015, one week after the Final Four loss to Duke, and the university coerced the woman not to report it to authorities, according to a federal lawsuit filed Monday.

The case, which was filed in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Michigan Southern Division, alleges three unnamed players — identified only as John Doe 1, 2 and 3 — took the 18-year-old student Jane Doe home from an East Lansing bar between the evening of April 11, 2015 and the morning of April 12.

The woman never reported the alleged sexual assault to police, said Karen Truszkowski, the woman’s attorney. But according to the lawsuit, the woman did report the incident to a counselor at the Michigan State University Counseling Center, which she claims failed to properly advise her and even implied it would not be in her “best interest to report the incident to law enforcement.”

“I think the complaint kind of speaks for itself,” Truszkowski said, declining further comment.

More: Michigan State basketball coach Tom Izzo delivers fiery defense of himself, program

More: Michigan State, Mark Dantonio and a cloud of sexual assaults

More: MSU walk-on basketball player charged with assault

 

It wasn’t immediately clear Monday if MSU coach Tom Izzo or anyone in the MSU athletic department was notified about the allegations.

The suit is the latest black eye for a university and a basketball program under fire for its handling of allegations of sexual assault and violent acts against women. It’s also the third allegation of multiple MSU basketball players raping a woman since 2010. Only one of those incidents were reported to police.

In 2015, the federal Office for Civil Rights determined MSU’s handling of some Title IX cases had created a “hostile environment” for individuals who complained about relationship violence or sexual misconduct and found there was confusion among MSU’s athletic department staff about who should report sexual assault claims to the university’s investigation office.

Emily Guerrant, MSU’s vice president and university spokesperson, said the university does not comment on pending litigation. A message for the MSU athletic department was not immediately returned.

The woman, who remains a student at MSU, alleges she was at Harper’s Bar when the Spartans’ basketball team arrived after midnight. One of the players offered to buy her a drink and asked if she would like to meet “other guys” from the team. The woman, who was a sports journalism major, alleges one of the players then invited her to a party at an apartment and one player “lied” and told the woman her roommate was on her way to the party.

The lawsuit says the woman was having a difficult time holding her glass, though she said she did not have a lot to drink. She then accepted a ride to the party from two players — the party was at one of their off-campus apartments — and there was no party and her roommate was not there.

The lawsuit alleges the woman “was feeling discombobulated” and tried to send a text but could not control her thumbs and believed she may have been drugged. Then the first player allegedly pulled her into a bedroom and told her, “You are mine for the night.”

After the woman asked for water and to see basketball memorabilia, the second player then took her to another room when the lights went out.

According to the lawsuit, the woman said she was forcefully thrown face-down onto the bed and held so she could not move while the second player raped her from behind. The woman was crying and could not speak, her lawsuit claims, and she did not consent to the activity.

The lawsuit alleges the first player and a third player took turns raping her after the second player finished. The woman claims she does not remember anything until waking up on a couch a few hours later, then called a taxi back to her dorm. There, her roommate told her she did not know about a party. The roommate, the lawsuit states, had been looking for the woman. 

The lawsuit says on April 20, 2015, the woman reported the rape to a counselor at the Michigan State University Counseling Center and completed an initial intake and assessment. When she disclosed to the counselor the three men who allegedly raped her were MSU basketball players, the female counselor’s demeanor reportedly changed and she told the alleged victim she needed another person in the room with them. According to the lawsuit, it was not clear who the additional person was or why they were brought into the room.

According to the lawsuit, the MSU Counseling Center staffers then “made it clear to Plaintiff that if she chose to notify the police, she faced an uphill battle that would create anxiety and unwanted media attention and publicity as had happened with many other female students who were sexually assaulted by well-known athletes.” The staff members, per the court filing, then advised the woman they had seen a lot of these cases with “guys with big names” and the best thing to do is to “just get yourself better” implying to the woman it would not be in her best interest to report the incident to law enforcement.

The woman’s suit claims she was not advised to have a physical exam, seek medical treatment or have STD or pregnancy tests. It also alleges she was not notified of her federal Title IX rights, protections, and accommodations.

“Plaintiff was expressly told by MSUCC staff that ‘if you pursue this, you are going to be swimming with some really big fish,’ ” the lawsuit alleges.

The lawsuit says the woman then became “frightened” and did not report the alleged rape to either police or MSU’s Office of Institutional Equity. She also did not file a no-contact order and claims she was not advised by the university’s counselors of that option.

According to the lawsuit, the woman in October 2015 “had become so traumatized, depressed, and withdrawn to the point that she was admitted to the Sparrow Hospital outpatient psychiatric dayprogram for intensive psychiatric treatment.” She withdrew from classes that semester and, according to the lawsuit, explained to university officials she had been raped and was suffering from the trauma.

The lawsuit adds the university did not offer the woman academic assistance and was not referred to the Title IX office.

The woman resumed classes in January 2016 and changed her major. She sought private psychiatric care in February 2016 and remains on prescribed medication, according to the lawsuit.

Michigan State has been under intense scrutiny for its handling of Title IX cases and violent acts against women, including its suppression of some of Larry Nassar’s victims. But the issues have extended past Nassar, the disgraced former MSU sports medicine doctor who abused victims under the guise of medical treatment. 

A Free Press investigation in January found three unreported sexual assault allegations in MSU’s football program, bringing the total to six cases of sexual assault involving 11 players during Mark Dantonio’s first 11 seasons. All but two of those cases, both of which occurred in 2017, were dismissed by then-Ingham County Prosecutor Stuart Dunnings III.

And then in January, an ESPN report in alleged ex-MSU player Travis Walton and two unnamed players allegedly sexually assaulted a woman in April 2010, with a letter claiming then-athletic director Mark Hollis said he would personally investigate the allegations. There was no police report filed in that case, and any resolution is unclear. Walton has denied the claim.

Four months later, in August 2010, MSU players Adreian Payne and Keith Appling were accused of raping a woman. Ingham County prosecutor Stuart Dunnings III said no crime was committed and did not press charges.

Hollis resigned Jan. 26, hours before the Free Press and ESPN reports were published.

 

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Michigan State basketball player charged with assault https://www.badsporters.com/2018/04/07/michigan-state-basketball-player-charged-with-assault-2/ https://www.badsporters.com/2018/04/07/michigan-state-basketball-player-charged-with-assault-2/#respond Sat, 07 Apr 2018 16:34:14 +0000 http://www.badsporters.com/?p=3406 EAST LANSING, Mich. (WILX) – There are assault charges against a Michigan State University basketball player. Michigan State Police records show that 19-year-old Brock Washington has been charged by prosecutors in Ingham County with a misdemeanor assault. The charge is listed as an “assault or assault and battery” reported by the Michigan State Police and […]

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EAST LANSING, Mich. (WILX) – There are assault charges against a Michigan State University basketball player.

Michigan State Police records show that 19-year-old Brock Washington has been charged by prosecutors in Ingham County with a misdemeanor assault. The charge is listed as an “assault or assault and battery” reported by the Michigan State Police and charged on March 8, 2018.

According to ESPN, Washington is the “lone suspect in an alleged assault that Michigan State campus police last fall classified as fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct.” This assault allegedly happened on August 29, 2017 at 3 a.m. in a university residence hall.

ESPN says that a female student reported two days later to campus police that she was groped by Washington.

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