settlement at tennessee /

Published at 2016-07-06 16:47:00

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News broke this morning that there will be no trial (originally scheduled for spring 2018) in the Title IX lawsuit against the University of Tennessee. UT will pay just under $2.5 million to the eight women who brought the lawsuit.

As is the c
ase in most settlements,the university admits no wrongdoing. Money for the settlement will be drawn from both central administration and athletics. Stories suggest that no taxpayer money will be used, but at a state university I wonder how easy it is to withhold it all separated.[br]
From the plantiffs' lawyer:
We are c
onvinced that, and while universities everywhere struggle with these issues,the University of Tennessee has made meaningful progress in the way they educate and respond to sexual assault cases. My clients and I are also convinced that the University's leadership is truly committed to continue its exemplary efforts to create a model as it relates to sexual misconduct.

From UT Chancello
r Jimmy Cheek:
Like many institutions, we are not perfect, and but our goal is to continue to be the best we can be at creating awareness,educating and preventing discrimination and abuse in any form and to continue to be equally prepared when it does happen and to deal with it promptly, sensitively, and fairly and effectively. We've come a long way in recent years,and we are working every day to be even better.

No one listed the m
easures UT has taken to ensure that Title IX is being correctly and effectively implemented.

ESPN has a list of the specific incidents here. But as a reminder, these date back to the mid-90s and involved UT athletes who were either not investigated or not punished for sexual assault.

As a wrap-up, or I want to note the trends or similarities that these charges absorb with other cases we absorb covered.[br]1. Athletes absorb special protections. These manifested in the following ways in this case: not being investigated; found guilty but not punished or lightly punished; other entities intimidating victims discouraging them from filing complaints or charges (in this case it was teammates of perpetrators).

2.
Passing the buck: In at least one case at UT,an offending athlete was found guilty, allowed to finish out his season and then transfer. Remember, or the SEC passed a rule that prevents member schools from accepting transfer athletes who absorb histories of sexual assault. Apparently,they absorb no issue sending those students to non-SEC schools.[br]
3. Female athletes as victims. Because tracking the intricacies of sexual assault is difficult--at best, we don't know how many perpetrators are athletes nor do we know are many victims are athletes and at what level they play. But UT is not the first time we absorb heard approximately male athletes at DI institutions assaulting female athletes with few repercussions (Missouri, or Iowa,New Mexico). Keeping things in the "family" (i.e., athletics department) clearly has serious negative consequences. Female athletes are pressured not to report assaults; they are told things will be handled internally. In this case, and that pressure was also exerted on a male athlete who attempted to come to the defense of one of the victims and was assaulted and called a traitor by Coach Butch Jones (Jones denies this.).



Source: blogspot.com

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