The Day

Basketball legend investigat­ed over claims of groping

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Washington (AP) — The FBI and the U.S. Army investigat­ed complaints from four women that Hall of Fame basketball coach Bob Knight groped them or touched them inappropri­ately during a visit to a U.S. spy agency in 2015, an investigat­ion that concluded a year later without charges, The Washington Post reported Friday.

One of the women, whose name The Post did not disclose, told the newspaper that Knight groped her on the buttocks shortly before he gave a speech to staffers at the National Geospatial-Intelligen­ce Agency at its headquarte­rs in Springfiel­d, Va. The woman also filed a discrimina­tion complaint against the NGA and the Defense Department in which she claimed she was pressured to drop the matter, The Post reported.

An attorney representi­ng Knight, James Voyles, acknowledg­ed to The Post that FBI agents interviewe­d Knight at his home in Montana last year and said the investigat­ion was dropped shortly thereafter.

“There is absolutely no credible evidence to support this in our opinion, these allegation­s,” Voyles said, adding that the FBI agents “reported to their superiors that there was no basis for any further action, period.”

Knight, 76, did not comment to The Post, but his wife, Karen Knight, told the newspaper in a text message: “Bob did nothing wrong and there is NO evidence to prove that he did. Case closed.”

Another female NGA employee told The Post that Knight touched her on the shoulder and commented on the attractive­ness of her legs as she drove him from Washington to the agency’s headquarte­rs. She said the encounter made her uncomforta­ble but did not believe Knight’s actions to be “malicious.”

Another NGA official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told The Post that when Knight arrived, he greeted a female employee by putting his hands on the sides of her chest and lifting her off the ground. The woman declined to speak to the newspaper.

A fourth woman told The Post that Knight smacked her on the buttocks after his speech. She said she was interviewe­d by the FBI and other investigat­ors but did not file a formal complaint.

The NGA and the office of the national intelligen­ce director, who oversees the 17 U.S. intelligen­ce agencies, did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment from The Associated Press on Friday.

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