Here is an article from the St. Paul newspaper: LINK
I heard the writer talk on SiriusXM this afternoon.
One point is that the students (like most people) felt that a prosecutor's decision to not bring charges is a finding of not guilty. As a former military and state prosecutor, I can assure you that it isn't. It is a determination that for various reasons the prosecutor can't see his or her way to being able to prove every element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. That is all that it means.
The University received a complaint under Title IX and was required to investigate. It did and filed an 82 page report that recommended five players be expelled, four suspended for a year, and one placed on probation. These investigations don't use the beyond a reasonable doubt standard. Instead they use (as civil suits do) a preponderance of the evidence standard, which is that it is more likely than not that something happened. It's not unheard of for a person found not guilty of murder to be found liable for the wrongful death of the victim. (See Simpson, O.J.) If your primary investigative agency makes these findings against student-athletes, I don't see how any university can allow them to play. Again this isn't a criminal process, so don't start hollering "presumption of innocence."
If all the students were asking for is for the President and AD to say "we're sorry that we didn't explain this better" this might go away, but it isn't. I don't see how the University can accept the players' demands that the suspensions be canceled. It may mean that they withdraw from the bowl in favor of Northern Illinois (tough challenge for NIU this late in the game, but then Washington St. won't have prepared for them either) and cancel scholarships. The players' shop steward has already said that UM can't afford to do that for 120 players. (If they have really have 120 on scholarship, the NCAA will come calling.) I recognize that it would cast the team to a level in the Big 10 with Rutgers, but what choice do you have? Do you say that there is a special Title IX process for when the student involved is also an athlete?
I heard the writer talk on SiriusXM this afternoon.
One point is that the students (like most people) felt that a prosecutor's decision to not bring charges is a finding of not guilty. As a former military and state prosecutor, I can assure you that it isn't. It is a determination that for various reasons the prosecutor can't see his or her way to being able to prove every element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. That is all that it means.
The University received a complaint under Title IX and was required to investigate. It did and filed an 82 page report that recommended five players be expelled, four suspended for a year, and one placed on probation. These investigations don't use the beyond a reasonable doubt standard. Instead they use (as civil suits do) a preponderance of the evidence standard, which is that it is more likely than not that something happened. It's not unheard of for a person found not guilty of murder to be found liable for the wrongful death of the victim. (See Simpson, O.J.) If your primary investigative agency makes these findings against student-athletes, I don't see how any university can allow them to play. Again this isn't a criminal process, so don't start hollering "presumption of innocence."
If all the students were asking for is for the President and AD to say "we're sorry that we didn't explain this better" this might go away, but it isn't. I don't see how the University can accept the players' demands that the suspensions be canceled. It may mean that they withdraw from the bowl in favor of Northern Illinois (tough challenge for NIU this late in the game, but then Washington St. won't have prepared for them either) and cancel scholarships. The players' shop steward has already said that UM can't afford to do that for 120 players. (If they have really have 120 on scholarship, the NCAA will come calling.) I recognize that it would cast the team to a level in the Big 10 with Rutgers, but what choice do you have? Do you say that there is a special Title IX process for when the student involved is also an athlete?