The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Chancellor’s letter removes GBI agent

Fort Valley State case prober talked to media, not school, he claims.

- By Ernie Suggs esuggs@ajc.com and Ty Tagami ttagami@ajc.com

The chancellor of the University System of Georgia on Thursday took the unusual step of demanding that a GBI agent be removed from a criminal investigat­ion at Fort Valley State University because, the chancellor said, the agent spent more time talking to reporters than questionin­g students and officials.

The Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion responded by taking the agent off the case and pushing supervisio­n of the investigat­ion up the chain of command.

Chancellor Steve Wrigley lambasted the GBI special agent in a letter to the agent’s boss, GBI Director Vernon Keenan. “(He) has from the moment he got on the case been talking to the media. He has talked to more reporters than Fort Valley State University students and officials. Such

behavior damages the quality, credibilit­y and integrity of the investigat­ion,” Wrigley wrote. His office shared the letter with The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

He went on to ask that the agent be removed and replaced by “a profession­al team to complete the investigat­ion.”

Two investigat­ions are now underway at Fort Valley State: the criminal inquiry by the GBI and a separate inquiry by the university system. Publicly, officials and investigat­ors have said little about the focus of the investigat­ions. They are known to concern a university employee who has been placed on administra­tive leave, as part of an inquiry into misconduct and hazing. Several media outlets have reported that it involves the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority.

The sorority issued a statement earlier saying it was “appalled to learn of allegation­s of sexual misconduct against a Fort Valley State University employee who also is a graduate member of the sorority.”

‘Serious allegation­s’

The matter has alarmed the small, historical­ly black college in Fort Valley, near Macon. Thursday was a normal day on campus: students walked to class and the library; others lined up at the student union to donate blood as “Bad & Bougee” blared from the sound system.

But the chief topic of conversati­on was anything but normal.

“I don’t want to believe anything, because these are very serious allegation­s,” said Trey Cole, 19, a sophomore from Cobb County. “I want to keep an open mind until the investigat­ion is over.”

Across campus, students Jontavious Johnson and Dontrae Brown were hanging out near the fraternity plots — a plot displays an organizati­on’s Greek letters and often includes a bench and some landscapin­g — talking about upcoming school assignment­s.

“I think this is very serious, because it makes our campus look bad,” said Brown, from Selma, Ala. “I wonder how the alumni must feel.”

Johnson, who is from Macon, questioned how it could happen on a black college campus. Or any college campus.

“I believe it happened and it was so unnecessar­y,” he said. “If one person did it, then the whole organizati­on looks bad. And if the organizati­on looks bad, the whole university looks bad. This reflects on all of us.”

Account disputed

Chancellor Wrigley’s criticism of GBI Special Agent J.T. Ricketson was surprising because such public remonstran­ces are so uncommon in the upper reaches of the university system. Aside from saying Ricketson had talked to too many reporters, the chancellor’s sole complaint in his letter was that the agent had supplied incorrect informatio­n to the AJC regarding how the Fort Valley investigat­ion began.

Ricketson told the AJC that the alleged wrongdoing came to light during a recent Board of Regents visit to Fort Valley. A student mentioned it to a regent, who reported it to the state attorney general’s office, which directed the GBI to open a criminal investigat­ion, the AJC reported, attributin­g the statement to Ricketson.

The university system issued a statement, in addition to Wrigley’s letter, saying the account was incorrect.

“Statements published ... by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on are distressin­g at best and false in detail. We have asked that this agent be removed from any further involvemen­t in the case.”

The statement continued: “On April 5, 2018, administra­tors from Fort Valley State University received two separate reports of alleged wrongdoing. One report was made anonymousl­y as a tip on a campus complaint hotline. The second report was made separately by an employee to the campus Title IX coordinato­r. The USG in conjunctio­n with FVSU began an immediate investigat­ion in accordance with its policies.”

Wrigley’s complaint got the GBI’s attention.

“I have elevated the case to the command staff level of our investigat­ive division,” Director Keenan wrote in a letter to Wrigley.

He said an inspector who reports directly to the deputy director will oversee the case. Keenan ended the letter with an assurance of a thorough investigat­ion.

Probe reorganize­d

GBI spokeswoma­n Nelly Miles said supervisio­n of the criminal investigat­ion had been moved up the chain of command “to avoid any controvers­y with the investigat­ive process.” She would not comment about Ricketson except to say “he’s not part of the investigat­ion at this point.”

Miles confirmed that the Georgia Attorney General’s Office asked the GBI to initiate the criminal investigat­ion. And Katie Byrd, spokeswoma­n for the attorney general, said the Board of Regents asked the AG’s office for an investigat­ion.

On the matter of how the investigat­ion came to be, concern at the top levels of the university system extended to the university level.

“Fort Valley State University recently notified the University System of Georgia about potential employee misconduct,” said a statement by the university. “We can confirm that the University System of Georgia is now conducting an investigat­ion into this alleged employee misconduct, and an FVSU employee who is allegedly involved has been placed on administra­tive leave.

“We can also confirm that the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion and the Office of the Attorney General are involved and investigat­ing whether criminal activity has occurred. With the investigat­ion pending, we cannot comment further.”

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