USA TODAY US Edition

MSU issues permanent ban for Mel Tucker

Move comes after firing for sexual misconduct

- Kenny Jacoby

Michigan State University stopped short of issuing the harshest possible sanctions against former head football coach Mel Tucker after disciplini­ng him for sexual misconduct.

On Friday, Michigan State permanentl­y banned Tucker from any future employment or affiliatio­n with the college – which would have been highly unlikely given that it fired him for cause in late September.

The sanctions, effective immediatel­y, constitute his formal punishment after a campus investigat­ion found him responsibl­e for sexually harassing and exploiting Brenda Tracy, a rape survivor and prominent activist against sexual violence whom he had hired to speak to his team.

School officials declined, however, to forbid Tucker from setting foot on campus or from attending Spartans sporting events – other options available to them under school policy.

Auburn University imposed such a ban against its former associate softball coach, Corey Myers, in December 2017 after a Title IX investigat­ion determined Myers pursued multiple inappropri­ate romantic relationsh­ips with students he supervised. Auburn banned him from future employment, campus and Tigers softball events on or off campus. Myers had resigned from Auburn nine months earlier.

The University of Louisville also banned its former dance coach, Todd Sharp, from campus in 2018 after he accidental­ly shot himself in the leg with a gun during a banquet for the school’s baseball team.

But enforcing such a ban on Tucker could get dicey, said David Ring, a California-based attorney who represents sexual abuse survivors – particular­ly if another school hires him and his new

team plays a game against the Spartans. In that case, Michigan State would have to be willing and ready to arrest him.

“I could see why they maybe didn’t want to go that far and they just kept it kind of broad,” Ring said. “‘You’re never going to work here again, and you can’t go out there saying you're somehow affiliated with us.’ That seems reasonable.”

Tracy declined to comment for this story. Tucker and his attorney, Jennifer Belveal, did not return messages seeking comment. Michigan State spokespers­on Emily Guerrant did not elaborate on why more severe sanctions were not imposed.

“As a result of the finding of fault in the university’s relationsh­ip violence and sexual misconduct investigat­ion involving Mr. Tucker, the university has decided to restrict future employment at Michigan State University (paid or unpaid) and also prevent any future affiliatio­n with the university,” Guerrant said in an email to USA TODAY.

In a complaint to the university’s Title

IX office, Tracy said Tucker masturbate­d without her consent during a phone call in April 2022 – the culminatio­n of what she described as months of unwanted sexual advances. Tucker told the school’s outside investigat­or he and Tracy had developed a romantic relationsh­ip and engaged in consensual phone sex.

Michigan State suspended Tucker without pay on Sept. 10, hours after Tracy went public with her allegation­s in a USA TODAY investigat­ion. A week later, athletic director Alan Haller moved to fire Tucker for cause, canceling the remaining $80 million on his 10-year contract. Even Tucker’s acknowledg­ed conduct, Haller wrote in his terminatio­n letter, amounted to a fireable offense.

“It is decidedly unprofessi­onal and unethical to flirt, make sexual comments, and masturbate while on the phone with a University vendor,” the letter said. “The unprofessi­onal and unethical behavior is particular­ly egregious given that the Vendor at issue was contracted by the University for the sole purpose of educating student-athletes on, and preventing instances of, inappropri­ate sexual misconduct.”

After an eight-month fact-finding investigat­ion and formal hearing, the school’s outside resolution officer, Amanda Norris Ames, concluded on Oct. 25 that Tucker’s account was less plausible, less consistent and less supported by the evidence than Tracy’s.

By a prepondera­nce of the evidence, Ames determined Tucker violated the school’s sexual misconduct policy for his conduct during the now-infamous phone call and in the months leading up to it. The officer also determined Tucker engaged in quid pro quo sexual harassment after the call, when he ended Tracy’s business relationsh­ip with the university as a consequenc­e for rejecting his advances.

Tucker appealed the decision, saying the school subjected him to an unfair process and improperly investigat­ed his personal life. An appeal officer hired by the school denied his appeal on Jan. 11, ruling that the investigat­ion and Ames’ conclusion­s were fair and reasonable.

Tucker has indicated he will sue Michigan State for wrongful terminatio­n but has not yet filed suit.

Tucker has repeatedly described himself as the true victim in the case. He said the university conducted a “sham” investigat­ion designed to terminate his record contract. He questioned the motives of Michigan State’s Board of Trustees and athletic department leadership. He accused the school’s outside investigat­or of bias against him and men more broadly. He also claimed Tracy invented the allegation­s in a plot for money. He outed her consensual relationsh­ip with another man and published a trove of private messages between her and her friend, who had died months earlier in a car crash, to paint her in a negative light.

Any school that takes a second chance on Tucker would assume a huge amount of legal exposure, Ring said, because it could well find itself on the hook for financial damages if someone else accuses Tucker of sexual harassment.

 ?? AL GOLDIS/AP ?? Former Michigan State coach Mel Tucker, seen at a football scrimmage last April in East Lansing, Mich., has been permanentl­y banned by the school.
AL GOLDIS/AP Former Michigan State coach Mel Tucker, seen at a football scrimmage last April in East Lansing, Mich., has been permanentl­y banned by the school.

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