SMU's AD was personally signing checks and delivering them to players, haha. That's how arrogant and confident they were that nothing serious could ever happen to them.
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Originally posted by Hannibal View PostI want to know more about what led to this. Apparently a damning report is due out today. With that said, about half of these reports and exposure pieces end up being a total bust.
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The "damning" report is out.
Concusion -- Baylor is guilty of not establishing kangaroo courts for sexual assault in accordance with the Obama Administration's Title IX rules. Art Briles also failed to sufficiently act as judge, jury, and executioner when its players were accused of sexual assault and violence (accused, not convicted or even charged). The University is even guilty of applying a "very by the book student conduct approach that treated all respondents equally, regardless of their status as a student-athlete".Last edited by Hannibal; May 26, 2016, 12:21 PM.
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It's a little more than that, but yeah -- it's mostly in response to the bullshit Dear Colleague "non-law" letter that is now Title IX law.Dan Patrick: What was your reaction to [Urban Meyer being hired]?
Brady Hoke: You know.....not....good.
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I'm honestly curious, Oracle -- how familiar are you with the OCR's Dear Colleague letter of 2011 (I think)? The summary section of the Baylor findings is textbook tracking of what the OCR NOW considers Title IX violations. Universities now have to act as quasi-criminal justice systems in response to any allegation of sexual violence or risk losing Federal funding.
I can go into this in mind-numbing detail. A relative of mine -- who is as ardent an Obamaniac as you can imagine -- works for OCR and deals with this newly minted issue on a daily basis.Dan Patrick: What was your reaction to [Urban Meyer being hired]?
Brady Hoke: You know.....not....good.
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Originally posted by iam416 View PostI'm honestly curious, Oracle -- how familiar are you with the OCR's Dear Colleague letter of 2011 (I think)? The summary section of the Baylor findings is textbook tracking of what the OCR NOW considers Title IX violations. Universities now have to act as quasi-criminal justice systems in response to any allegation of sexual violence or risk losing Federal funding.
I can go into this in mind-numbing detail. A relative of mine -- who is as ardent an Obamaniac as you can imagine -- works for OCR and deals with this newly minted issue on a daily basis.
In the end, the wild speculation that Art Briles impeded law enforcement investigations or colluded to cover up sex crimes is nowhere to be found in that report. All of the accusations center around Baylor not having a sufficient separate system of law enforcement and justice.
The quote that I wrote before isn't made up by the way. It's actually in the report. One of Baylor's "violations" is treating people equally instead of giving the testimony of the accused extra weight.
Seriously.
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