Investigation Finds 'Hazing' Often Used to Minimize Assault in HS Sports

AthleticBusiness.com has partnered with LexisNexis to bring you this content.

Copyright 2017 The Post and Courier
All Rights Reserved

Post & Courier (Charleston, SC)

 

The Georgia school district said it was investigating the baseball players for "misbehavior" and "inappropriate physical contact." What it didn't reveal was that a younger teammate had reported being sexually assaulted.

Even after players were later disciplined for sexual battery, the district cited student confidentiality to withhold details from the public and used "hazing" to describe the incident.

Across the U.S., perhaps nowhere is student-on-student sexual assault as dismissed or as camouflaged as in boys' sports, an Associated Press investigation found. Mischaracterized as hazing and bullying, the violence is so normalized on some teams that it persists for years, as players attacked one season become aggressors the next.

The AP examined sexual violence in school sports as part of its larger look at student-on-student sex assaults. Analyzing state education records, supplemented by federal crime data, AP found about 17,000 official reports of sex assaults by students in grades K-12 over a recent four-year period. That figure doesn't capture the extent of problem because attacks are widely under-reported and not all states track them or classify them uniformly.

Nor does the data paint a detailed picture of specific incidents, revealed when the AP reviewed more than 300 cases of student-on-student sexual violence that surfaced through law enforcement records, lawsuits, interviews and news accounts. In those cases, the sports setting emerged as a leading venue for such attacks.

Teammate-on-teammate sexual assaults occurred in all types of sports in public schools, and experts said the more than 70 cases in five years that AP identified were the tip of the iceberg. Though largely a high school phenomenon, some cases were reported as early as middle school.

Serious injuries and trauma have resulted, records show. An Idaho football player was hospitalized in 2015 with rectal injuries after he was sodomized with a coat hanger. Parents of a Vermont athlete blamed his 2012 suicide on distress a year after teammates sodomized him with a broom.

The acts meet federal law enforcement definitions of rape and sexual assault, but language used by schools and coaches shrouds the problem and minimizes its severity. It also can influence whether off-campus authorities hold anyone accountable, meaning such cases don't always show up in state education records or federal crime data as sexual assault, and no one specifically tracks or catalogs them in a systemic way.

"Language is everything," said B. Elliot Hopkins, a sports safety expert at the National Federation of State High School Associations. "If anyone knew that their kid was going to run the risk of being sexually assaulted to be part of a team, we wouldn't have anyone playing any sports."

In the Georgia case, five to eight upperclassmen on the Parkview High School baseball team near Atlanta barged into the hotel rooms of freshmen teammates during an out-of-state tournament in 2015. One boy had fingers shoved through his shorts into his rectum, according to state education disciplinary records, and two others fought off similar assaults.

In disciplinary proceedings months later, the upperclassmen didn't challenge the evidence but described what they did as "wrestling and horse playing."

A draft public statement from the Gwinnett County Public Schools initially said a player's family had reported he was "sexually assaulted," records AP obtained show. But the final version referred only to "inappropriate physical contact." When asked, district officials said that wording was "more inclusive" of the "diversity of the types of misconduct alleged."

AP also found multiple cases where coaches fostered the opportunity for misconduct through poor supervision. Others became aware of misbehavior but treated it as a team disciplinary matter. Some failed to do anything.

In Tennessee, a freshman basketball player at Ooltewah High School, outside Chattanooga, told a coach that upperclassmen used a pool cue to sexually assault him and others at the team's cabin during an out-of-town tournament trip in 2015, records show.

Despite that warning, two upperclassmen went on to pin another boy down on a bed while a third one thrust a pool cue into his rectum, the records show. Coaches, who were elsewhere in the cabin at the time, drove him to a hospital after seeing him bleeding. The boy needed emergency surgery.

A nurse, not the coaches, contacted authorities. Investigators said the head coach instructed players at some point to stay quiet. At the team's cabin, the head coach's wife cleaned up and threw away the boy's soiled clothing, "essentially erasing evidence of the crime," investigators said.

The head coach and other school officials said in legal responses they didn't know about the violence or seek to withhold information. The coach and his wife, who was not charged, did not respond to messages.

Read More of Today's AB Headlines

Subscribe to Our Daily E-Newsletter

 
May 7, 2017
 
 
 

 

Copyright © 2017 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Terms and Conditions Privacy Policy
Page 1 of 466
Next Page
AB Show 2024 in New Orleans
AB Show is a solution-focused event for athletics, fitness, recreation and military professionals.
Nov. 19-22, 2024
Learn More
AB Show 2024
Buyer's Guide
Information on more than 3,000 companies, sorted by category. Listings are updated daily.
Learn More
Buyer's Guide