Peterson - Bad Sporters https://www.badsporters.com News Blogging About Athletes Being Caught Up Mon, 01 Jun 2020 21:29:40 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 Peterson: Former Iowa Wesleyan basketball player says he was stopping an assault; now he https://www.badsporters.com/2020/06/01/peterson-former-iowa-wesleyan-basketball-player-says-he-was-stopping-an-assault-now-he/ https://www.badsporters.com/2020/06/01/peterson-former-iowa-wesleyan-basketball-player-says-he-was-stopping-an-assault-now-he/#respond Mon, 01 Jun 2020 21:29:40 +0000 https://badsporters.com/?p=6879 CLOSE Jeff Harper and Victoria Villareal during happier times (Photo: Victoria Villareal) In early January, Victoria Villareal learned her fiancé was in a Chinese jail.  Former Iowa Wesleyan basketball player Jeff Harper had traveled to Shenzhen, a business hub of 12 million people, in the hopes of landing an international basketball contract. Official records about what led […]

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Jeff Harper and Victoria Villareal during happier times (Photo: Victoria Villareal)

In early January, Victoria Villareal learned her fiancé was in a Chinese jail. 

Former Iowa Wesleyan basketball player Jeff Harper had traveled to Shenzhen, a business hub of 12 million people, in the hopes of landing an international basketball contract.

Official records about what led to his jailing are limited, but here’s what Villareal says she’s been told:

In the early morning hours of Jan. 7, Harper was walking to a nearby fast-food restaurant after watching a friend perform a comedy skit. Along the way, Harper saw a man assaulting a woman. The alleged assailant stopped and approached the 6-foot-8 Harper as he moved toward the woman to check on her.

Harper, 32, shoved the man out of the way to get to the woman as quickly as possible. The man left the scene and Harper checked on the woman, who said she was OK. 

Five hours later, the man Harper had pushed out of the way wound up in the hospital. Harper was arrested.

“We still don’t know what was done in those five hours,” Villareal said. 

Harper initially was jailed for what Villareal has learned is “serious harm to another with negligence.” But the injured man has since died, so the charge against Harper could be upgraded to “causing death with negligence,” she said Harper’s attorney told her.

Under China law, Villareal said, only attorneys and defendants are permitted to see official documents in a case. Villareal knows only what Harper and his attorney, who works for the Dentons law firm in Shenzhen, tell her.

She found Harper’s attorney after extensive research — on the internet, from friends and from people with legal knowledge in Boise, Idaho.

“I feel I did my homework,” she said.

In the months since the incident, Harper has been largely cut off from the outside world. He was not aware of what the novel coronavirus was, even as it spread through China earlier this year, Villareal said.

He learned last week that his grandmother back home in Tennessee was terminally ill.

“Jeff was devastated,” Tess Woods, Harper’s mother told The Register on Monday. “He was very close to her.”

Villareal is trying to raise funds to help pay for Harper’s legal fees. She created a GoFundMe page for assistance in getting him out of jail, bringing him home and addressing any mental health care needs.

She is also working with U.S. Sen. Mike Crapo of Idaho and Harper’s attorney for the return of her fiancé to Boise, where the couple lives.

The Register reached out to former Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad, who is now the U.S. ambassador to China, for comment. His office would not comment on Harper’s situation, including this email from Branstad’s office early Monday:

“Unfortunately, Mr. Harper has not signed a privacy act waiver, so we are unable to comment on anything about him or the allegations made against him.”

The Register also obtained correspondence between the U.S. Consulate in China and Crapo, which corroborates that Harper is being held in a Chinese jail.

“We’re just not sure what’s going to happen,” Villareal told The Register during one of multiple phone conversations. “It’s a very unique story, the way everything is happening. Jeff’s in China. I’m in Idaho. Laws are different. There’s a language barrier.”

Harper’s college basketball career, journey to Iowa

Harper was part of a Tennessee connection Iowa Wesleyan coach Alan Magnani recruited to his team in 2010. It started with Davis Warner, and continued with Joe Evans, Jeremy Simmons and then Harper. All four attended Volunteer State Community College in Gallatin, Tennessee. All four ended their college careers at the Mount Pleasant, Iowa, college.

“They were all big contributors for us,” Magnani recalled.

Harper was the biggest, the most imposing.

“He was an impressive-looking dude,” said Magnani, who coached at Iowa Wesleyan until 2012. “He maybe came across with a scowl sometimes, and maybe some thought he was the toughest guy in a room, but really, he’s a marshmallow. He would do anything for anybody.

“It doesn’t surprise me that he would go to somebody’s aid.”

That’s the side Villareal saw the first time they met.

Harper was working at a youth basketball camp in the same Boise facility where Villareal was working as a personal trainer. She was on one side of the facility, while Harper was on the other.

“He came to Boise during his (2017) off-season after playing overseas,” she said. “He’s got a teammate (in Boise) that he played with in Bolivia. Jeff came to stay with him and work his camps.”

Jeff Harper, shown here during his time at Volunteer State. Harper is currently being held in a Chinese jail and his family is working to bring him back to the United States. (Photo: Jackson Sun)

They still didn’t know one another well, until Villareal ventured to the other side of the gym to watch what was going with the basketball camp. Harper had already torn his patellar tendon while dunking the ball at one of the camp sessions. He was on crutches.  They struck up a conversation. She eventually became Harper’s trainer.

“I’d never really met him before that,” she said.

They dated for a year. They’ve been living together for three years. Their engagement “wasn’t anything super exciting,” Villareal said. “It wasn’t a huge occasion. We weren’t even going to make it public until he got back from playing in China.

“Then this happens.”

An uncertain future

Villareal and Harper speak via cell phone every couple of weeks — most recently last weekend, when he sent this video message:

“This is not a joke. I need all the help I can get. It would sure be appreciated — this is my fiancée (he holds up a picture of them together). Please –— take everything that you see in here seriously.”

Harper said the video was sent sometime between conversations with the U.S, Embassy, which she said checks in on Harper occasionally, and Villareal.

When not on the phone together, she’s working behind the scenes to try to get him released.

Villareal forwarded to the Register a letter to Crapo from Jeremy Cornforth, Consular Chief and U.S. Consulate General in Guangzhou, China. Cornforth wrote, in part:

“We have been monitoring his case very closely since his arrest on January 7, 2020. Due to restrictions on in-person visits during the COVID-19 outbreak, the consulate is currently able to speak with incarcerated U.S. citizens only via telephone. A consular officer most recently spoke with Mr. Harper by phone on March 24, 2020 to check on his health and well-being and to deliver messages from family and friends.

“Please be assured that we have no higher priority than the safety and welfare of U.S. citizens. We are in close contact with Mr. Harper’s family, and will continue to provide consular assistance. I hope this information is helpful to you as you respond to your constituent.”

Villareal sends Harper workout suggestions through his attorney. 

“I’m on his case to do what he can from a workout perspective,” she said. “It’s good for his mind and it’s good mentally. It’s all bodyweight stuff — push-ups, lunges, squats —things like that.

“He gets outside for exercise. He can walk outside of the room in what’s like a patio area.”

He also craves pizza, she said.

“I was recently on the phone with his lawyer (in China), and we found a Pizza Hut,” she said. “So, after four months, he’s going to get a cheese pizza.”

Meanwhile, his mother wonders when she’ll see her son again.

“It’s just so overwhelming,” Woods said. “I’ve not been able to sleep a lot. Victoria, his fiancée, is doing a wonderful job running everything.”

Mom and son spoke a couple of weeks ago.

“He’s such a good kid,” Harper’s mother said. “The only trouble he’s ever been in was when he was a little kid and finished his work in school early. He’d get in trouble for talking to people around him. He was bored. He was very smart. He finished his assignments before the others.”

What’s next? 

Villareal doesn’t know. Harper is getting along as well as can be expected — she does know that.

“He’s (in a cell) by himself,” Villareal said. “That’s probably fortunate, considering the coronavirus that’s been going on.”

She waits as patiently as possible. She doesn’t know when they’ll be together again. A wedding date hasn’t yet been set.

“We’d talked a lot about marriage, and, get this — he didn’t believe in it at first,” Villareal said. “He didn’t see what the big deal was.

“He thought it was just a piece of paper, but he’s changed his mind.”

Columnist Randy Peterson has been writing for the Des Moines Register for parts of six decades. Reach him at rpeterson@dmreg.com, 515-284-8132, and on Twitter at @RandyPete. 

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Peterson: Here https://www.badsporters.com/2018/04/20/peterson-here/ https://www.badsporters.com/2018/04/20/peterson-here/#respond Fri, 20 Apr 2018 11:42:47 +0000 http://www.badsporters.com/?p=3652 CLOSE Cameron Lard on how his freshman season went and what he needs to work on. Tommy Birch/The Register Cameron Lard shoots during Iowa State’s game against Texas in the Big 12 men’s tournament Wednesday, March 7, 2018, in Kansas City, Missouri.(Photo: Charlie Riedel/AP) Story Highlights ISU Policy says no suspension Lard started eight of […]

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Cameron Lard on how his freshman season went and what he needs to work on.
Tommy Birch/The Register

AMES, Ia. — Why wasn’t Iowa State basketball player Cameron Lard suspended for a game or two after being cited — not arrested — on Feb. 4 for possession of drug paraphernalia and speeding, you wonder?

Because the school’s explicit Student-Athlete Discipline Policy doesn’t call for suspension in this instance, that’s why.

The 6-foot-9 freshman from Louisiana was charged with two simple misdemeanors  —possession of a glass pipe, aka drug paraphernalia, that just happened to have residue in it, and for going 50 in a 40 mph zone.

Neither are exactly severe crimes. Possession of drug paraphernalia falls under the Level II section of Iowa State’s policy — and that calls for counseling and possibly community service.

Under the law, it’s such a minor offense that Ames Police Department Cmdr. Geoff Huff wonders about the standards to which we hold our college athletes.

“It’s a pretty minor incident,” Huff said of Lard’s charge. “If it would have been anyone else but Cameron Lard, I wouldn’t have even gotten one call on that.

“We do this every day, writing possession tickets. Simple misdemeanor.  No one ever cares.

“It’s a little unfair to the student-athlete, in my opinion. If he was anyone else — no one would care. It’s the same level of charge as speeding.”

Athletes get scholarships. They’re on television. Thousands of fans pay money to see them perform — from the players that average one point per game, to Lard’s averages of 12 points and 8 rebounds.

They’re in the public eye. They’re held to higher standards, rightly or wrongly.

They’re cautioned about the scrutiny they’re under each school year. They know every allegedly questionable move is social media fodder.

Eventually, it’ll come out. Eventually, even about two months after the fact, news will hit the streets.

Why didn’t this become news sooner? Because, contrary to popular belief, not everyone looks daily at misdemeanor police blotter entries.

If Lard’s situation was a second-offense Level II violation, he would have been suspended for 10 percent of a season. A third offense means indefinite suspension, in case you wondered.

By law, Lard’s wrongdoing is piddly. It didn’t even reach the level for a field sobriety test.

“The officer probably didn’t feel that (Lard) was impaired,” Huff said. “If the officer felt there was any impairment, they would have done some testing. That didn’t even come up.”

Lard started eight of the remaining nine games after receiving the citations. The game he didn’t start was Senior Night — when coach Steve Prohm started an all-senior lineup.

So if I’m interpreting ISU’s policy correctly, it was Lard’s first offense for something other than speeding. Possession of drug paraphernalia is a simple misdemeanor, under Section 124.414 of the Iowa Code.

No suspension. It’s in the policy, as it pertains to what happened the night after Iowa State lost 81-67 at Baylor.

Ames police stopped Lard around 7:30 p.m. He was ticketed. He wasn’t arrested. He wasn’t locked up. He was the only person in the car. The officer smelled marijuana. Lard wasn’t charged with smoking pot. He was charged only with having a drug paraphernalia in the back seat, which was discovered after Lard gave the officer consent to search the car he was driving.

Those are facts, per online reports and from my conversation with Huff.

“It was basically a citation,” Huff said. “He got a couple citations, and he was on his way.”

First offense. Simple misdemeanor. Again, the Iowa State policy says no suspension, although there’s also this sentence in the Level II section:

“The Athletics Department has the right to declare any infraction as Level I.”

Apparently that didn’t happen, because Lard started three days later at Texas Tech — or Iowa State only learned of the situation Wednesday.

That’s something that’s unknown at this point, because Prohm isn’t commenting, and Lard, according to Iowa State media relations, isn’t doing interviews right now.

Maybe we’ll know more during the jury trial that’s scheduled for 9 a.m. on May 8.

Iowa State columnist Randy Peterson has been with the Register for parts of five decades. Randy writes opinion and analysis of Iowa State football and basketball. You can reach Randy at rpeterson@dmreg.com or on Twitter at @RandyPete.

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