raped - Bad Sporters https://www.badsporters.com News Blogging About Athletes Being Caught Up Wed, 29 Apr 2020 18:25:18 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 Lawsuit: Teammates raped Seneca Valley High football player in 2018 https://www.badsporters.com/2020/04/29/lawsuit-teammates-raped-seneca-valley-high-football-player-in-2018/ https://www.badsporters.com/2020/04/29/lawsuit-teammates-raped-seneca-valley-high-football-player-in-2018/#respond Wed, 29 Apr 2020 18:25:18 +0000 https://badsporters.com/?p=5747 A former high school freshman claims in a lawsuit that his junior varsity football teammates raped him in a Montgomery County locker room in 2018. A member of the Seneca Valley High School junior varsity football team was allegedly raped by teammates in an unsupervised locker room in September 2018, according to a civil lawsuit […]

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A former high school freshman claims in a lawsuit that his junior varsity football teammates raped him in a Montgomery County locker room in 2018.

A member of the Seneca Valley High School junior varsity football team was allegedly raped by teammates in an unsupervised locker room in September 2018, according to a civil lawsuit filed in Montgomery County Circuit Court.

The student — identified in court documents as “John Doe” — was a freshman when he was assaulted before practice on Sept. 17, 2018, the lawsuit said.

“For several minutes, several football players held him down, forced his pants and underwear down, and penetrated, touched, assaulted and slapped John Doe,” according to the suit, which was filed March 9.

The negligence suit claims the Montgomery County Board of Education, school principal Marc Cohen, Athletic Director Jesse Irvin, varsity football coach Fred Kim and JV coach Cody Martin were aware of previous sexual assaults in football locker rooms, and didn’t do enough to prevent the Seneca Valley attack.

According to the suit, Seneca Valley High School didn’t notify law enforcement until four days after the assault.

Kim and Martin were fired in December 2018, according to the lawsuit. Cohen and Turner still work at Seneca Valley.

Thomas DeGonia and Jerry Hyatt, the lawyers for the boy and his mother, said the school officials knew of an earlier football locker room assault, in 2017 at Damascus High School. It was reported to the school, school security and county administration, “but no corrective action was taken by MCPS.”

A few months later, in February 2018, a student-athlete was sexually assaulted in a locker room as part of a hazing ritual.

The Seneca Valley incident occurred about a month before four Damascus High School football players were sexually assaulted by their teammates. After initially being charged as adults in the Damascus case, a judge referred all the defendants to juvenile court, which provides more leniency and privacy for people charged.

According to DeGonia and Hyatt, school officials “knew or should have known of abuse, sexual or otherwise, in the Seneca Valley locker room and in MCPS locker rooms around the county, and as a result, it was reasonably foreseeable that this incident would occur absent proper supervision.”

At this point, there have been no adult or juvenile criminal charges filed in the Seneca Valley case.

In addition to the plaintiffs in the Seneca Valley suit, DeGonia represents the plaintiffs in the Damascus suit, which was filed in February.

Gboyinde Onijala, a spokeswoman for the school system, said in an email, “MCPS is committed to the safety of all students. The Seneca Valley High School administration acted quickly when these allegations were brought to their attention. While the Montgomery County police were unable to pursue charges based on what the victim shared at the time with the school and law enforcement, the school did take disciplinary action against those believed to have been involved and provided robust support to the student and their family.”

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Former NFL Player Kellen Winslow Allegedly Kidnapped and Raped Multiple Women https://www.badsporters.com/2018/06/16/former-nfl-player-kellen-winslow-allegedly-kidnapped-and-raped-multiple-women/ https://www.badsporters.com/2018/06/16/former-nfl-player-kellen-winslow-allegedly-kidnapped-and-raped-multiple-women/#respond Sat, 16 Jun 2018 13:38:29 +0000 http://www.badsporters.com/?p=4062 Former NFL star Kellen Winslow II has been charged with kidnapping and raping two older women and targeting others, including an 86-year-old, in Southern California. Winslow Jr., 34, faced a San Diego Court on Friday and pled not guilty to charges of rape, kidnapping and other crimes, according to the Associated Press. Deputy District Attorney […]

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Former NFL star Kellen Winslow II has been charged with kidnapping and raping two older women and targeting others, including an 86-year-old, in Southern California.

Winslow Jr., 34, faced a San Diego Court on Friday and pled not guilty to charges of rape, kidnapping and other crimes, according to the Associated Press.

Deputy District Attorney Dan Owens said, according to The San Diego Union-Tribune, the first alleged victim was a 54-year-old woman had been hitchhiking when she accepted a ride from Winslow Jr. in March. She alleges he “told her if she screamed, he would murder her” before raping her, Owens said.

A 59-year-old woman alleges after getting in his car Winslow Jr. kidnapped, raped and sodomized her in May, the newspaper reported. He was charged with indecent exposure of a third victim, 55, in May.

The newspaper also reported Winslow Jr. is charged with burglary with the intent to rape a 71-year-old woman in June and burglary with the intent to rape an 86-year-old woman that same month.

Kellen Winslow II

Winslow is facing a maximum sentence of life in prison, the AP reported.

His attorneys, Brian Watkins and Harvey A. Steinberg, did not immediately respond to PEOPLE’s request for comment. Winslow Jr.’s rep also did not immediately respond to PEOPLE’s request for comment.

Winslow Jr.’s father, Pro Football Hall of Famer Kellen Winslow, was present in the Vista courtroom on Friday, according to The Union-Tribune.

He, along with Janelle Winslow — Winslow Jr.’s wife — told the newspaper in a statement that they supported him.

“On behalf of our son and my husband, we want to reiterate our love, support and affection for him during this difficult process,” the statement read. “We will always be there for him and we know the true facts will come out.”

• Want to keep up with the latest crime coverage? Click here to get breaking crime news, ongoing trial coverage and details of intriguing unsolved cases in the True Crime Newsletter.

“He would have no need to burglarize or steal anything from anyone at a trailer park,” Steinberg said. He added the former football player “looks forward to being vindicated” in court.

Winslow Jr. was first taken into custody on June 7 after being accused of burglary at a mobile home, according to the Los Angeles Times. He posted $50,000 bond and was released from the Vista, California, jail.

Police then arrested him on the rape charges on Thursday and, following his arraignment Friday, he was denied bail and will stay behind bars His next court date is June 25.

Winslow II's father Kellen Winslow

Winslow II’s father Kellen Winslow

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Winslow Jr. was arrested and charged with drug possession in 2014 after being accused of having synthetic marijuana. He received a conditional discharge.

His father, Winslow Sr., played 10 seasons in the NFL playing from 1979 to 1987 for the San Diego Chargers. Winslow Sr. is recognized as one of the greatest tight ends in the league’s history.

Winslow Jr. played college football at the University of Miami, and was later drafted by the Cleveland Browns in 2004. He also played for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, the Seattle Seahawks, the New England Patriots and the New York Jets.

He had been mounting a comeback for the past two years.

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Lawsuit says MSU hoops players raped student https://www.badsporters.com/2018/04/09/lawsuit-says-msu-hoops-players-raped-student/ https://www.badsporters.com/2018/04/09/lawsuit-says-msu-hoops-players-raped-student/#respond Mon, 09 Apr 2018 23:59:05 +0000 http://www.badsporters.com/?p=3428 A female student says Michigan State subjected her to a “hostile educational environment,” failed to advise her of her rights and did not offer adequate resources for help after she told counselors in 2015 that three Spartans basketball players had raped her. The allegations are made in a lawsuit filed Monday in U.S. District Court […]

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A female student says Michigan State subjected her to a “hostile educational environment,” failed to advise her of her rights and did not offer adequate resources for help after she told counselors in 2015 that three Spartans basketball players had raped her.

The allegations are made in a lawsuit filed Monday in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Michigan that also states the woman suffered severe emotional distress and had to temporarily withdraw from classes, change her major, seek psychiatric help and constantly fear running into the three men on campus as a result of the incident and the school’s failure to properly respond.

Neither the woman, who is a current student, nor the three players, who are no longer at the school, are named in the lawsuit. Her attorney said the players are not being named because the focus of the lawsuit is “with the way she was treated by the university.”

The 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 woman spoke to Outside the Lines on the condition she not be identified because she fears revealing her identity publicly. The woman said she did not report the alleged assault to police in 2015 because she and some of her friends, who were younger than 21 at the time, had used fake IDs to get into a bar the night of the alleged incident and she worried they would all get cited with underage drinking charges.

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She said she filed the lawsuit with the hope it would encourage more women to come forward about assault and to send a message to the university.

“I don’t want a girl who’s a senior in high school right now, with her whole life ahead of her, to have to go through the same thing I did,” she said.

The woman’s lawsuit states that “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.”

Outside the Lines reached out Monday afternoon to Michigan State spokesperson Emily Gerkin Guerrant, who said the university had no immediate comment.

The lawsuit states the woman met the three basketball players in an East Lansing bar on April 12, 2015. She was a journalism major interested in sports reporting and was eager to talk to team members.

She told Outside the Lines that a player bought her a Long Island iced tea and that shortly after she started to drink it, she began to lose control of her muscles — dropping that drink and another. She said she left the bar with some of the players after being led to believe her roommate had gone to a party at an apartment belonging to one of the players. Once at the apartment — and realizing her roommate wasn’t there — the lawsuit states the woman felt “discombobulated” and “tried to send a phone text, but she could not control her thumbs to formulate a text.”

In a lawsuit, a student says Michigan State subjected her to a “hostile educational environment” and failed to provide protection, instruction or adequate support after she told counselors in 2015 that three basketball players raped her. AP Photo/Al Goldis

She said in the interview that one of the players said to her, “You know you’re mine for the night?” to which she responded that she was just trying to find her friend. When another player later invited her into his bedroom to look at his sports memorabilia, she said she went willingly because, as an avid sports fan, “I thought it was pretty cool,” she told Outside the Lines. She remembered being incredibly thirsty, and she was given a glass of water, the lawsuit states, and she was “drinking the water when the room went dark.”

She said in the lawsuit that she was thrown down on a bed, was held down and was unable to move or speak while three players took turns raping her.

“I was crying. I was trying to push myself up, and I couldn’t move,” she told Outside the Lines.

“At no time did she consent to the sexual activity,” the lawsuit states.

She said she woke up on a couch in the apartment the next morning and took a cab back to her residence hall. She told Outside the Lines that she later wondered whether her alcoholic drink and the glass of water she was given had been spiked.

The woman eventually told a friend what had happened, and on April 20, 2015, the friend took her to the Michigan State University Counseling Center, according to the lawsuit. When the woman told the counselor that the three men “were notable MSU athletes on the basketball team,” the counselor told her that she needed someone else in the room and brought in another person whose identity the woman said she did not know, the lawsuit states, and the “counselor’s demeanor completely changed.”

The lawsuit states that the counseling center staff made it clear to her that if she chose to notify 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.”

She told Outside the Lines that she told the counselor about how she was scared to report the incident to police because she assumed she would get in trouble for underage drinking.

“She never told me or reassured me that that would not be a factor,” the woman told Outside the Lines.

The lawsuit states she was told, “If you pursue this, you are going to be swimming with some really big fish.”

The lawsuit states that the counseling staff did not notify her of her right to report the incident to MSU’s Office of Institutional Equity, which handles complaints of sexual violence under the Title IX gender equity law, nor did they notify her of her Title IX rights, protections and accommodations.

The woman told Outside the Lines that she was under the impression that by telling the counseling center staff about the alleged assault that she had indeed “reported it” to MSU, and she was unaware that she needed to do anything further to get help. As a result, the lawsuit states, she was not informed of her right to receive a no-contact order to keep the men out of her residence hall, and she suffered “panic and flashbacks” when she saw them in the dining hall.

Her fear persisted into the following semester, and in October 2015 she had “become so traumatized, depressed and withdrawn” that she was admitted to an outpatient psychiatric program for intensive treatment, the lawsuit states.

She told Outside the Lines she couldn’t continue her sports journalism classes because of how she felt.

“Everyone I was in classes with or working with was just all into sports, like ‘bleed green,'” she said. “I’m thinking to myself, ‘If only you could look at them like I have to. If only you knew what it felt like.'”

The lawsuit states she temporarily withdrew from school. To get a refund of her tuition, the lawsuit states she had to explain her assault to more university officials and was not informed of any options for academic assistance.

Counseling, academic assistance, and protection and separation on campus from the alleged perpetrators are among the provisions that colleges should provide to students who report incidents of sexual violence, according to federal Title IX guidelines from the U.S. Department of Education.

The lawsuit states that the counseling center staff did refer her to the MSU Sexual Assault Program, which provides counseling and advocacy specifically for people who report being victims of sexual violence. But because her counseling center experience left her “so discouraged and frightened,” the lawsuit states, the woman did not seek help from the SAP until February 2016, by which time she had resumed classes and changed her major.

Even after she sought help from SAP, the lawsuit states that she was still not notified of her rights under Title IX and her option to report the incident to the Office of Institutional Equity — which would have been required to investigate — even though university protocol at that time required SAP advocates to provide that information.

Truszkowski, the woman’s attorney, also represents two women who have accused MSU football players of sexual assault. One was the victim in a case last week in which three now-former players pleaded guilty to felony charges of seduction, after they had been facing sexual assault charges for having pulled the woman into a bathroom and forced her to perform oral sex.

Truszkowski also filed a Title IX lawsuit on behalf of another woman against MSU in fall 2017 stemming from that woman’s report of being sexually assaulted by former football player Keith Mumphery, who was banned from campus in 2016 after the school reversed an earlier finding that Mumphery was not responsible for assaulting the woman. Mumphery never faced criminal charges. In a January court filing, MSU denied her claims and said its actions did not cause her to suffer any additional harassment. On March 15, the judge in that case ordered the parties to mediation.

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. 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 MSU athletic department.

The report publicized not previously known police reports of sexual or violent incidents involving members of the MSU football team and Tom Izzo’s storied basketball program.

On Friday, Outside the Lines reported that Michigan State basketball player Brock Washington was charged by prosecutors in Ingham County, Michigan, with misdemeanor assault on March 8 after a criminal sexual conduct investigation. Washington had been named as the lone suspect in an alleged forcible sexual contact incident that was reported to have occurred at 3 a.m. on Aug. 29, 2017, in a university residence hall and was reported to police two days later. Sources have told Outside the Lines that a female student told campus police that Washington, who has been unable to be reached for comment, had groped her without her permission.

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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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International rugby player tells police all about night he allegedly raped woman https://www.badsporters.com/2018/02/27/international-rugby-player-tells-police-all-about-night-he-allegedly-raped-woman/ https://www.badsporters.com/2018/02/27/international-rugby-player-tells-police-all-about-night-he-allegedly-raped-woman/#respond Tue, 27 Feb 2018 14:50:52 +0000 http://www.badsporters.com/?p=2576 An international rugby player accused of raping a woman after a night out told police he didn’t “penetrate her at any point”. Ulster player Stuart Olding, 24, from Ardenlee Street in Belfast, denies one count of rape as the high-profile trial hears audio recordings of police interviews. Olding was questioned by detectives at Musgrave PSNI […]

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An international rugby player accused of raping a woman after a night out told police he didn’t “penetrate her at any point”.

Ulster player Stuart Olding, 24, from Ardenlee Street in Belfast, denies one count of rape as the high-profile trial hears audio recordings of police interviews.

Olding was questioned by detectives at Musgrave PSNI (Police Service Northern Ireland) station about the alleged incident in June 2016.

Fellow Ireland international Paddy Jackson, 26, from Oakleigh Park also denies raping the same woman and a further charge of sexual assault.




Two other men charged in connection with the alleged incident also deny the charges against them.

During the police interviews on June 30 2016 – two days after the alleged rape – Olding denied having intercourse with the complainant.

He said: “I didn’t penetrate her vagina with my penis at any point.”

He also told detectives from the PSNI’s rape crime unit that he did not see Jackson penetrate the woman.

“I didn’t see that,” he said.



Ireland and Ulster rugby player Paddy Jackson arrives at Belfast Crown Court

During further questioning, Olding added: “I didn’t see Paddy penetrating her from behind. He was behind her but I didn’t see him penetrating her.”

The court also heard that Olding told police Jackson was “sitting on the bed” watching the woman “give” him oral sex.

Olding rejected allegations that he had forced the complainant to perform oral sex by putting pressure on the back of her head and pulling her on to his penis.



Ireland and Ulster rugby player Stuart Olding arrives at Belfast Crown Court

When asked by police what made him believe she was consenting, Olding answered: “She was doing it. I wasn’t forcing her.”

Denying applying pressure to the complainant’s head, Olding further stated her hand had been on his penis during the sex act and that she had been “above” him.

Earlier in the taped police interviews, Olding was asked if there had been any discussion the morning after the alleged attack between himself and Jackson about what went on in the bedroom.



Paddy Jackson of Ireland kicks a conversion
Paddy Jackson of Ireland kicks a conversion

He said: “Yes. We just talked about what happened. We were pretty hungover. We were drunk whenever it was happening.”

At the end of the interviews, Olding’s solicitor Joe Rice said: “You can take it from his attitude that he categorically denies any involvement in these allegations.”

A juror in the rape trial of two Ireland and Ulster rugby players has been discharged because of illness.

Addressing the 11 remaining jurors, Judge Patricia Smyth told Belfast Crown Court: “I have received a medical report in respect of the person in your group who was ill and, as a result of the content, I have spoken with him and discharged him from any further involvement in the trial.”

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