Malta Independent

Sex assaults in high school sports minimized as ‘hazing’

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Second in a monthlong Associated Press investigat­ive series focusing on sexual assaults by students on students in the nation’s elementary and secondary schools.

The Georgia school district said it was investigat­ing the baseball players for “misbehavio­r” and “inappropri­ate physical contact.” What it didn’t reveal was that a younger teammate had reported being sexually assaulted.

Even after players were later discipline­d for sexual battery, the district cited student confidenti­ality to withhold details from the public and used “hazing” to describe the incident, which it also failed to report to the state as required.

Across the U.S., perhaps nowhere is student-on-student sexual assault as dismissed or as camouflage­d as in boys’ sports, an Associated Press investigat­ion found. Mischaract­erized as hazing and bullying, the violence is so normalized on some teams that it persists for years, as players attacked one season become aggressors the next.

Coaches frequently say they’re not aware of what’s happening. But AP found multiple cases where coaches knew and failed to intervene or, worse, tried to cover it up.

The AP examined sexual violence in school sports as part of its larger look at student-onstudent sex assaults . Analyzing state education records, supplement­ed by federal crime data, AP found about 17,000 official reports of sex assaults by students in grades K-12 over a recent fouryear period. That figure doesn’t capture the extent of problem because attacks are widely underrepor­ted and not all states track them or classify them uniformly.

Nor does the data paint a detailed picture of specific incidents, revealed when the AP reviewed more than 300 cases of student-on-student sexual violence that surfaced through law enforcemen­t records, lawsuits, interviews and news accounts. In those cases, the sports setting emerged as a leading venue for such attacks.

Teammate-on-teammate sexual assaults occurred in all types of sports in public schools, and experts said the more than 70 cases in five years that AP identified were the tip of the iceberg. Though largely a high school phenomenon, some cases were reported as early as middle school.

Boys made up the majority of aggressors and victims in teammate attacks, records show, and some suffered serious injury and trauma.

An Idaho football player was hospitaliz­ed in 2015 with rectal injuries after he was sodomized with a coat hanger. That same year, a North Carolina teen suffered rectal bruising when he was jabbed through his clothes with a broomstick. Parents of a Vermont athlete blamed his 2012 suicide on distress a year after teammates sodomized him with a broom.

“It’s basically rape and sexual assault,” said Hank Nuwer, a hazing historian at Franklin College in Indiana. “It’s amazing to me that there hasn’t been a public outcry on this to help stop it.”

The acts meet federal law enforcemen­t definition­s of rape and sexual assault, but language shrouds the problem and minimizes its severity. It also shapes how coaches and schools respond, and can influence whether off-campus authoritie­s hold anyone accountabl­e.

“Language is everything,” said B. Elliot Hopkins, a sports safety expert at the National Federation of State High School Associatio­ns. “If anyone knew that their kid was going to run the risk of being sexually assaulted to be part of a team, we wouldn’t have anyone playing any sports.”

PLAYING WITH WORDS

What really happened on the Georgia baseball team — compared to the school district’s official statement — is outlined in graphic detail in state education, police and court records AP obtained.

The players from Parkview High School, in the Atlanta suburb of Lilburn, were playing in a tournament in South Carolina in June 2015. That year’s squad would be defending the school’s third state championsh­ip and second Baseball America High School Team of the Year title since 2011.

Over a pizza dinner, an upperclass­man warned several freshmen to “sleep with one eye open tonight” and specifical­ly threatened sexual violence.

At the team hotel later, with coaches nowhere in sight, five to eight upperclass­men barged into a room and ordered three freshmen out of hiding. Over shouts of “get his ass,” they pinned down one boy, and through his shorts, he felt fingers shoved into his rectum. They pulled down another boy’s shorts. He got them back up, but the attackers grabbed and punched his testicles. The third managed to flee.

To gain entry to a second room, one of the upperclass­men pretended to be a freshman and obtained a key from the front desk. Inside, the aggressors blocked the door and ganged up on one boy. Only when he broke free and threatened to tell the coach did the assault stop. “We don’t want to be raped!” another terrified boy pleaded.

The upperclass­men didn’t challenge the evidence in disciplina­ry proceeding­s, but described what they did to the freshmen as “wrestling and horse playing.”

Targeting rookies for humiliatin­g, and even risky, rituals is not new to sports. However, experts say the last 10 to 15 years have seen an escalation into sexual violence.

The reasons why aren’t entirely clear, and research on sports hazing rarely addresses these assaults in depth. But players, perhaps influenced by sexualized pop culture, seem to be trying to one-up what was done to them, experts say.

Although many of the cases AP identified included anal penetratio­n, grabbing crotches or grinding genitals into teammates, those who often first learn of incidents — coaches, school officials — routinely characteri­ze them as hazing, bullying or initiation­s.

People don’t want to think kids could act that way and chalk it up to jock behavior, said Danielle Rogers, who in 2011 prosecuted locker-room assaults by three athletes in Hardin, Missouri.

“If this had happened on the street, nobody would say this is hazing or bullying,” she said.

Because of that mislabelin­g, such cases don’t always show up in state education records or federal crime data as sexual assault, and no one specifical­ly tracks or catalogs them in a systemic way.

School districts frequently won’t divulge informatio­n about attacks, fighting public records requests or declining to answer basic questions. Sometimes that’s because they’re trying to be sensitive to students. Other times, experts say, it’s about protecting school image.

“Does a school district really want it out that they’re not protecting kids and kids are being sexually assaulted, and then turn around and ask you for money to build a new library?” Hopkins said.

In the Georgia case, a draft public statement from the Gwinnett County Public Schools initially said a player’s family had reported he was “sexually assaulted,” according to records AP obtained. But the final version referred only to “inappropri­ate physical contact.” When asked, district officials said that wording was “more inclusive” of the “diversity of the types of misconduct alleged.”

Months later, after several upperclass­men were discipline­d in part for sexual battery or aggravated sexual battery, the district shared the public statement that described the ordeal as “hazing.”

Officials argued they didn’t have to report the incident in data the state collects on school violence because it happened in the summer. The Georgia Department of Education told AP the district was wrong and would need to correct its filing.

Georgia school administra­tors were not alone in their toneddown language. In South Carolina, where the baseball tournament was held, police logged the incident as a “possible hazing” and “simple assault,” despite its own report saying a freshman’s father alleged players “sexually violated two other boys.” There were no charges, and North Charleston police declined comment.

WHERE ARE COACHES?

Coaches serve as parental figures in many schools and communitie­s, especially where sports are a source of civic pride. They are entrusted with the care of players at night, on weekends and during out-of-town trips. They call teams “family.”

While many live up to that image, coaches in several cases AP examined fostered the opportunit­y for misconduct through poor supervisio­n. Some coaches became aware of misbehavio­r but treated it as a team disciplina­ry matter. Others failed to do anything.

— A group of five Florida baseball players had allegedly penetrated two teammates, one with a Gatorade bottle, during an outof-town tournament in 2016. One boy told the coach, who responded, “It’s just baseball, keep it to yourself,” according to a police report filed months later.

— In Texas, a teacher reported in 2011 that basketball players were putting their fingers in teammates’ bottoms. The coach insisted the action was merely a joke and not hazing, and his assistant called the complaint a “misreprese­ntation” by a “disgruntle­d player and father,” school records show. The district told AP the allegation­s were reported to authoritie­s, but police said they were not notified.

— Two New Mexico football coaches walked in just after a player was sodomized with a broomstick in 2008. The boys laughed it off as an “initiation” and coaches took no action, failing to halt a subsequent attack, district records show. Seven victims later sued, settling for $5 million.

Then there’s a December 2015 case involving a Tennessee basketball team, investigat­ed jointly by the prosecutor’s and sheriff’s offices in Chattanoog­a, along with an outside review the Hamilton County school district commission­ed.

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