Orlando Sentinel

Scrutiny on NCAA after Baylor ruling

- By Stephen Hawkins AP writer Ralph D. Russo contribute­d.

The NCAA infraction­s committee’s decision against punishing Baylor for its mishandlin­g of sexual assault allegation­s in a sprawling scandal involving football players was jarring — even to the committee.

Joel Maturi, the chief hearing officer and a member of the committee, said the case was troubling for the seven-person panel, which included three women: Crimes being dealt with legally and in other forums were clearly tied to athletics, but off the table for NCAA punishment­s.

An associatio­n that governs athletic competitio­n between schools has nothing in its vast bylaws that directly deals with the worst transgress­ions committed by Baylor.

“We all agreed the conduct was egregious. In some ways, we’ve never had discussion­s where we’ve wanted to penalize an institutio­n. We’ve always gone into hearings trying to find out the truth and come to a right and fair conclusion,” Maturi said Wednesday after the committee released its findings in a highly critical 51-page report.

“Here, in many ways, many of us felt that there should be some penalty,” said Maturi, a former Minnesota athletic director. “But the fact of the matter is, we could not come to that conclusion based on the bylaws that exist before us.”

The allegation­s against Baylor surfaced in 2016 and alleged that coaches and staff shielded football players from punishment and failed to take action on allegation­s of sexual assault or other violence. The committee said the question it wrestled with was whether those athletes were given an “extra benefit” in the form of more lenient treatment than other students — the answer was no.

The actual mishandlin­g of sexual assault claims by the school was deemed out of the NCAA’s jurisdicti­on.

Legal experts say this is probably the right choice for an organizati­on in the midst of dramatic change. The NCAA, stung earlier this year by a Supreme Court ruling against it in an antitrust case, is looking at ways to decentrali­ze some of its governance. Just this week, the NCAA named a 23-person panel that will suggest changes to its constituti­on, setting the stage for a major overhaul.

NCAA President Mark Emmert alluded to the coming changes in a statement issued after the Baylor decision.

“This is a clear demonstrat­ion of why the associatio­n needs transforma­tional change to create alignment between authority and responsibi­lity to address the most critical issues in college sports” Emmert said.

Gabe Feldman, director of the sports law program at Tulane, said what happened at Baylor may have been “illegal, immoral and unethical” but that doesn’t make it an NCAA violation.

“I think the underlying question that needs to be asked by the NCAA and other sports governing bodies on the collegiate and profession­al levels is: Do we want our sports governing bodies to be in a position where they have to enforce the law?” Feldman said. “If that’s the position we’re in, we have much bigger problems. We need law enforcemen­t to enforce the law.”

Nebraska law professor Jo Potuto, a former infraction­s committee chair and her school’s faculty athletic representa­tive, said the NCAA shouldn’t be responsibl­e for punishing every misdeed by an athlete, coach or athletic department.

“It think it’s really a fundamenta­l misconcept­ion of the NCAA’s role,” she said.

Potuto pointed to the NCAA’s attempt to punish Penn State for the Jerry Sandusky scandal as setting a bad precedent with the public.

The NCAA broke from its usual procedures when it handed Penn State a jaw-dropping $60 million penalty, plus postseason bans and scholarshi­p restrictio­ns for the football program. The fine was challenged in court and some of the penalties were rolled back.

Feldman said the NCAA doesn’t have the expertise nor is it given the authority by its member schools to investigat­e Title IX allegation­s, which were prominent in the Baylor scandal.

“For a variety of reasons, the NCAA is limited in what it can do, it’s limited by what its rules say it can do,” Feldman said. “It’s not the NCAA saying we care about an improper benefit of $1,000 more than we care about sexual assault. It’s our jurisdicti­on covers the improper benefits. It doesn’t cover these other areas.”

Linda Livingston­e, Baylor’s president since 2017 and part of the new NCAA constituti­onal convention committee, said she understand­s the perception that Baylor wasn’t punished severely enough by the NCAA. The football program was placed on four years of probation for rules violations between 2011 and 2016, including secondary impermissi­ble benefits and drug testing violations.

Livingston­e said Baylor has been held accountabl­e in other ways, whether through the legal process, law enforcemen­t and criminal process in some cases or civil litigation in others. There was also a review by the school’s accreditin­g body, and the school still has open cases with the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights.

“And so while there certainly may be concern by some, and understand­ably so, about the NCAA process as it relates to this given the way in which the NCAA bylaws are written,” Livingston­e said, “I do think there are many other ways in which Baylor is and has been held accountabl­e.”

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