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Alan Judd's new story tonight...

NedRacineDawg

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Dec 3, 2019
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This a freely sourced story on the internet, not copied from the AJC.. If it violates DawgVent policy please remove. Same juvenile approach to reporting. Probably texted it in.

By Alan Judd
1 hour ago

ATHENS – University of Georgia football coach Kirby Smart said Tuesday he has never condoned sexual misconduct by his players, disputing a recent news report that asserted his program rallies to support athletes accused of violence against women.
“We take these allegations extremely serious,” Smart said. “Me personally, I take these allegations extremely serious. We do not tolerate sexual misconduct in our organization. ... Never have, never will.”
Smart, who rarely makes public comments during his team’s off season, spoke during an hour-long session with a small group of reporters invited to the football team’s offices. Athletics officials did not allow video recording or still photography and instructed reporters not to tweet about Smart’s remarks until the session ended.
Georgia’s athletics director, Josh Brooks, said the coach wanted “to set the record straight” in response to a story published June 27 by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. The article reported that since Smart became coach in 2016, 11 players had remained with the team after women reported violent encounters to the police or the university.
Neither Smart nor Brooks cited specific inaccuracies in the story. However, Brooks said the story wrongly suggested Georgia had failed to appropriately respond when players were accused of sexual or domestic violence.
“It crossed a serious line, and we will not stand for this conjecture,” Brooks said. He added, “The reporting also conveniently minimizes the significant actions we’ve taken in direct response to address these matters.”
The article focused on two cases: a rape case from 2021 involving a star defensive player and another sexual assault allegation from 2022 involving a recruit.
Smart dismissed Adam Anderson from the team after he was arrested on the rape charge. But, according to Anderson’s lawyer, Smart allowed eight other players to appear on their teammate’s behalf during a court hearing. Anderson’s accuser, also a Georgia student who worked part time in the football program’s office, was present in the courtroom.
At the same hearing, Bryant Gantt, the team’s director of player support, testified as a character witness for Anderson.
A lawyer who handles campus sexual assault cases said the presence of the players and Gantt indicated the university had inappropriately sided with the accused player over the student who alleged she was the victim of a sexual assault.
In the other case, Georgia signed Jamaal Jarrett to a football scholarship even though he was accused of sexually assaulting a woman during his official recruiting visit. During the same weekend, Jarrett drank with current players in an Athens bar, breaking curfew by more than two hours before returning to his hotel after 3 a.m., according to text messages the Athens police retrieved from his phone.
Jarrett’s accuser said they engaged in consensual sex at first. But she said Jarrett later forced her to perform oral sex.
The Athens police filed no charges against Jarrett, who was 16 at the time.
In the Anderson case, Smart said, he had no choice but to honor the players’ request to let them appear in court on their teammate’s behalf.
At one point Tuesday, Brooks said that when Gantt supports players in their dealings with the legal system, “it’s always for the university” as part of his job. Asked about Gantt’s appearance at Anderson’s bond hearing, however, Brooks said, “That was a personal decision he made.”
Anderson, who had been considered a potential first-round pick in the NFL draft, played one game as the police investigated the rape allegation against him. Georgia officials have said they weren’t aware of the investigation until after the game.
Once he learned about the allegation, Smart said, he suspended Anderson from the team.
“How is that to be contorted to be supportive of bad behavior?” he said.
In the Jarrett case, Smart said he considered revoking a scholarship offer after learning about the sexual assault allegation. But he said he honored the offer because the police filed no charges.
UGA challenges AJC reporting

The University of Georgia has challenged the accuracy of the AJC’s investigative reporting on the football program in the aftermath of a car crash in January that killed a recruiting analyst and a player.
In a letter sent to the AJC on Tuesday, the university’s general counsel Michael M. Raeber criticized the accuracy of a June 27 article that detailed the way the football program responds when players are accused of abusing women.
The letter also criticized the newspaper’s reporting on other aspects of the football program since the Jan. 15 crash that resulted from a player and a football staff member street racing through Athens.
The newspaper has published a series of investigative reports detailing the events surrounding the crash and the culture of the football program since Kirby Smart became Georgia’s head coach in late 2015. During that time, dozens of players have engaged in reckless, often lawless behavior that put them and others in jeopardy: excessive speeding, street racing and driving under the influence, among other offenses.
The AJC is reviewing the letter.
Smart, Brooks and two other university officials who spoke Tuesday said Georgia has a strong policy, as required by federal law, governing investigations of allegations of sexual misconduct by students.
When athletes are accused, they face the same scrutiny as other students, said Qiana Wilson, director of Georgia’s Equal Opportunity Office.
Athletes found to have engaged in sexual misconduct may be held out of competition, suspended or dismissed and may have their financial aid packages reduced or canceled, said Darrice Griffin, a senior deputy athletics director.
“We do a wonderful job of educating our student-athletes about sexual misconduct,” Smart said.
Smart acknowledged this off season, which followed his team’s second consecutive national championship, has been unusually difficult. On Jan. 15, recruiting analyst Chandler LeCroy and offensive lineman Devin Willock died in a high-speed car crash, after which defensive lineman Jalen Carter was charged with racing with them through Athens at speeds exceeding 100 mph. Eleven other players have been charged with excessive speeding, reckless driving and other serious traffic offenses since the fatal crash.
Smart said they still haven’t solved the problem.
“I don’t have the exact answer,” Smart said. “I wish I did.”
But he said he “vehemently disagrees” with the suggestion that off-field issues have tarnished his program.
“I’m a firm believer our program is a good program,” Smart said. “We have good kids in our program.”
About the Author
ajc.com
Alan JuddFollow Alan Judd on twitter
Alan Judd is an investigative reporter for the AJC. He has written about persistently dangerous apartment complexes in metro Atlanta, juvenile justice, child welfare, sexual abuse by physicians, patient deaths
 
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