The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Tech investigat­ing sexual assault claims against coach

- By Alan Judd ajudd@ajc.com and Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com

Georgia Tech opened an investigat­ion Friday into allegation­s its men’s basketball coach sexually assaulted an Arizona woman.

The school said it would hire an “outside, independen­t” investi- gator to look into charges against second-year coach Josh Pastner. He was accused in a lawsuit filed Thursday of assaulting or harassing the woman more than a dozen times in 2016.

“We expect every member of our community to practice the highest ethical principles and standards of conduct,” Tech said in a statement announcing the investigat­ion.

The announceme­nt ended the virtual silence with which Tech initially greeted the sexual-misconduct accusation­s.

Earlier, Tech spokesmen described the allegation­s as a “personal matter” and would not say whether the school’s president, G.P. “Bud” Peterson, was engaged in assessing Pastner’s status at Tech.

Tech’s investigat­ion began about 24 hours after Jennifer Pendley, 45, of Tucson, the girlfriend of a now-estranged friend of Pastner’s, sued Pastner, saying he masturbate­d in front of her and tried to force her to perform oral sex in a Houston hotel room in 2016. He was the head coach at Memphis at the time.

Pendley also said Pastner repeatedly groped and harassed her after he moved to Tech. Several of the episodes allegedly occurred on Tech property or at school-sanctioned events.

Pastner has strongly denied the allegation­s. Last month, he sued Pendley and her boyfriend,

Ron Bell, 51, accusing them of defamation, extortion and blackmail. The couple spent several weeks with Pastner’s team in 2016, first in Memphis and then in Atlanta. Bell has said he provided impermissi­ble benefits to two Tech athletes on Pastner’s behalf, violating NCAA rules.

Tech did not identify the investigat­or who will look into Pendley’s allegation­s. In the statement, the school said it had received no “direct complaints” and noted that no police report had been filed.

“However, the institute takes all allegation­s of sexual misconduct seriously, taking appropriat­e action when made aware of claims,” the statement said.

Tech finds itself dealing with sexual-misconduct allegation­s at a fraught moment. An onslaught of allegation­s against powerful men in entertainm­ent, the media and politics has left many institutio­ns feeling pressure to respond quickly and decisively.

The University of New Mexico on Thursday suspended its football coach, Bob Davie, for 30 days without pay while it investigat­es reports he told his team to “get some dirt” on a student who accused a player of rape.

At Michigan State University, Athletics Director Mark Hollis resigned recently over the school’s handling of sexual-assault cases involving athletes. The school also had come under fire for protecting Larry Nassar, the U.S. Gymnastics team doctor who molested hundreds of young athletes.

Tech’s history of aggressive­ly punishing students accused of sexual misconduct complicate­s how it

deals with Pastner’s case. An Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on analysis published in 2016 found Tech expelled or suspended nearly every student accused of sexual misconduct in the previous five years.

Tech was so strict state legislator­s introduced bills calling for due process, and the state Board of Regents adopted more lenient rules for all Georgia universiti­es.

In its policies, Tech says sexual misconduct by employees “represents a failure in profession­al and ethical behavior that will not be condoned.” Violators may face “permanent exclusion” from the school.

Tech is not a party to Pendley’s lawsuit.

Pendley broke into tears Thursday as she spoke outside the courthouse in Tucson, where her lawsuit was filed. “It’s very hard,” she said on Tucson television station KOLD, “when something like this happens to you and you think you’re the only person this has been happening to.”

“I’m willing to do what-

ever it takes to get justice for this,” she added.

In court filings, Pastner contends Pendley and Bell concocted the sexual assault claims as part of an extortion scheme.

Pastner declined to discuss the case Friday during a news conference to talk about Sunday’s game against No. 9 Duke. But he could not avoid the subject Thursday, when Tech lost 77-54 at Louisville. Spectators in the student section heckled Pastner, according to Twitter posts by a Louisville sportscast­er, and the coach’s postgame news conference quickly turned to the accusation­s he faces.

Pastner denied the allegation­s in no uncertain terms.

“Unequivoca­lly, zero, zero, zero, zero, zero, zero truth to any of those disgusting, bogus allegation­s,” he said. “It’s disgusting. And there’s zero, zero, zero, zero, zero, zero, zero, zero, zero, zero, zero truth to that.”

“I absolutely got victimized,” Pastner added. “I’m an absolute victim in this whole deal.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Ron Bell of Tucson, Arizona, and Georgia Tech basketball coach Josh Pastner had been friends for years. That friendship dissolved amid recent allegation­s of NCAA rules violations, extortion and sexual assault.
CONTRIBUTE­D Ron Bell of Tucson, Arizona, and Georgia Tech basketball coach Josh Pastner had been friends for years. That friendship dissolved amid recent allegation­s of NCAA rules violations, extortion and sexual assault.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States