sexually assaulted her in June 2010, about six months after the Gavin incident.
“Numerous university officials” knew Washington had a history of violence against women,
, ESPN reported. “But they
, graphically described in the documentary, Washington told his victim – a woman called “Jess” – he would kill her if she reported it. She did, but the
and nothing happened.
. “Legally bound” under Federal Title IX to conduct their own investigation, university officials did not follow through, either. “They knew what he did to me, but they did nothing and allowed him to do it to another girl,” ‘Jess’ told Outside the Lines (OTL) between choked sobs.
Washington was tried and convicted in the Braeckel case, serving 120 days of a 5-year prison sentence. Last year, MU Chancellor
My run-in with the Mizzou Maxim, though trivial in comparison, was still trying.
I sent my request to Barrett, who stalled for almost sixty days. The Sunshine Law requires a response within 3 working days.
At first, the person with the information was “out”.
Subsequently, Ms. Barrett informed me no records would be released until she received a
$145 processing fee, with a two-week delay following payment.
I requested a fee waiver – I make about 20% of that amount on Heart Beat columns, and the publication has no budget to cover such expenses.
The Sunshine Law allows waivers for materials “in the public interest, likely to contribute significantly to public understanding of the operations or activities of a public governmental body.”
But the University was “not prepared” to waive fees, Ms. Barrett responded. That is patent nonsense. Mizzou routinely
waives fees for news media. Two months later and $145 poorer, I had my records.
Though I discovered Walther, I set out wondering if Mizzou was paying Columbia attorneys
Bogdan Susan and
Christopher Slusher to defend student athletes in criminal investigations.
Arman Keteyian and
Jeff Benedict alerted me to Slusher’s and Susan’s presence on Team Maxim in
The System: The Glory and Scandal of Big-Time College Football.
"Every year during Fall camp,” the authors explain, “
Derrick Washington had listened carefully as Bogdan Susan -- a leading criminal defense attorney in Columbia -- paid a visit to the football team and talked about what to do if approached by law enforcement:
Say you want to talk to your lawyer."
After one of Washington’s coaches heard from police about the Braeckel case, he gave the athlete Susan’s number. “Susan was the team lawyer,” Washington said. “He came in and spoke to the team every year since I was a Freshman.”
It’s no wonder attorneys are so involved in Mizzou athletics.
ESPN found 63 criminal incidents committed by Tiger football and basketball players from 2009 to 2014,
43 of which were deemed “sexual assaults”. In fact, the
University of Missouri ranked 2ndamong the colleges ESPN surveyed in sexual assault allegations.
If you’ve never read or heard that statistic before, that’s because local media practice the Mizzou Maxim too, failing to report stories about student athletes and crime until they make national headlines.
It took the ESPN documentary, released this June, to reveal a
2012 assault allegation reported to Mizzou police against football star
Dorial Green-Beckham.
Though Barrett couldn’t detail precisely why Mizzou is paying Walther and Bley, NCAA inquiries are
not criminal investigations and "the University
does not pay (through its Athletics Department or otherwise) for representation when a student athlete is charged with a crime,” she explained.
”When a student athlete is charged with a crime.” It’s hard to hear the roar of the Tigers over those words -- even with Team Maxim on the field.