Present and accounted for. :hi:
The plaintiff's attorney, John Clune, of Boulder, Colorado, said his firm's investigation uncovered at least 52 acts of rape, including five gang rapes, by no fewer than 31 Baylor football players from 2011 to 2014.
52 rapes since 2011??? Sounds like the slip-n-fall attorneys think they have found an unguarded Brinks truck. How the heck do you keep 52 women quite? Hell, I have a wife and two daughters that have never been raped and I can't seem to keep them quite...can't even find their volume controls. :dunno:
52 rapes since 2011??? Sounds like the slip-n-fall attorneys think they have found an unguarded Brinks truck. How the heck do you keep 52 women quite? Hell, I have a wife and two daughters that have never been raped and I can't seem to keep them quite...can't even find their volume controls. :dunno:
And these are the the types of Extra Constitutional powers that the Obama Administration and his Czars/minions instituted to curcumvent the Judicial System. The Trump Campaign said they will revisit Title IX, among others, and correct the problems created by the previous Administration. It remains to be seen if the Trump Administration follows through.After reading the article, it appears claims were made before he raped this gal. If these crimes were reported to police, why wasn't he arrested and given a day in court then? Insufficient evidence? If the player wasn't held accountable by the legal system, what could/should Baylor be expected to do? I'm not justifying or excusing what the rapist did, but it seems title ix has pushed schools into a position of being legal authorities. Things like this should be handled by the real legal system. When a student/player/administration is given a trial and convicted, the university should then act. I just don't see how they can be expected to do the job of the police and court system. It's also a sticky wicket to punish based on an accusation. Innocent until proven guilty still applies doesn't it? Title IX is becoming a weapon and path to large financial settlements. Just not sure what the answer is when accusations are made and if our expectations of coaches and universities are realistic/fair?
The lawsuit describes a culture of sexual violence under former Baylor football coach Art Briles in which the school implemented a "show 'em a good time" policy that "used sex to sell" the football program to recruits. That included escorting underage recruits to strip clubs and arranging women to have sex with prospective players, the suit alleges.
Former assistant coach Kendal Briles the son of the head coach once told a Dallas-area student athlete, "Do you like white women? Because we have a lot of them at Baylor and they love football players," according to the suit.
Investigation by lawyers identified at least 52 "acts of rape," including five gang rapes, by 31 football players in a four-year period. At least two of the gang rapes were committed by 10 or more players at one time, the suit states.
In the wake of this suit, Art Briles dropped his suit against Baylor. I imagine he's going to disappear for a while.
Time for a death penalty for the program.
So you're saying there weren't any? If so, that degree in Rocket Surgery isn't your friend.
This should ALL be handled in a court of law...where two convictions have already been handed down.
52 rapes since 2011??? Sounds like the slip-n-fall attorneys think they have found an unguarded Brinks truck. How the heck do you keep 52 women quite? Hell, I have a wife and two daughters that have never been raped and I can't seem to keep them quite...can't even find their volume controls. :dunno: