The Taos News

Tigers football coach cleared of misconduct allegation­s after weekend investigat­ion

- By JAMES BARRON

Taos Municipal Schools cleared head football coach Art Abreu Jr. to continue guiding the program after an investigat­ion into abuse claims by a former player, interim district Superinten­dent Valerie Trujillo said Tuesday (Sept. 20).

Abreu Jr., who is in his eighth year at the school, was placed on leave Friday, Trujillo said, after

district officials were informed of claims of physical, verbal and mental abuse. She declined to elaborate on who made the allegation­s or whether they were current or former players, saying it was a personnel matter.

Abreu Jr. said he did not know of the specifics of the abuse but was told the accusation­s came from a former player. There were also allegation­s he allowed players

to smoke marijuana and drink alcohol before and after games and practices, Abreu Jr. said.

Trujillo said the district did not look into any claims of alcohol use.

The investigat­ion did not last long, as Abreu Jr. said Taos athletic director Hernando Chavez informed him Saturday evening he could resume coaching duties Monday because officials could

not confirm any of the allegation­s. Abreu Jr. added he was told more than 50 people were interviewe­d.

Trujillo said she could not disclose how many people were interviewe­d.

“It was a very thorough and complete investigat­ion, but I am unable to disclose anything since it is a personnel matter,” Trujillo said.

Chavez and Trujillo confirmed

Abreu Jr. will be on the sidelines for Friday’s nondistric­t game at Bernalillo.

The Tigers head into the contest with a 3-1 record, having won three straight after a season-opening loss to St. Michael’s on Aug. 20.

Abreu Jr. called the decision a vindicatio­n of his coaching reputation.

“There was zero evidence found about the accusation­s,” he said. “Let me repeat that — zero evidence. It was a thorough investigat­ion, and it goes by fast when there is zero findings.”

The allegation­s, he said, went against his philosophy of coaching, adding that any player who was under the influence of drugs or alcohol would pay the price just by participat­ing in his practices.

“The way I conduct my practices, I would have kids dropping like flies [if that was happening],” he said.

Abreu Jr. comes from a family of coaches. His dad, Art Abreu Sr., was head coach at Las Vegas Robertson from 1991-2003, then in the mid-2000s was an assistant at New Mexico Highlands University. His grandfathe­r, Leland Abreu, coached multiple sports in Northern New Mexico and is best remembered as a head basketball coach at West Las Vegas, Peñasco, Taos and Highlands.

Abreu Jr., a 2002 Robertson graduate, spent seven years as an assistant at NMHU before taking the Taos job in 2014. He said he learned to run a discipline­d, rigorous program from them, and he felt hurt that his reputation was challenged.

“We hold ourselves to a high standard,” Abreu Jr. said. “I got two other guys who I share my name with [along with his son, Art Abreu III]. We worked so hard on this name to build it into a respectabl­e liking around the state of New Mexico and in the Southwest region. I’m not going to do anything to damage that.”

 ?? JIM WEBER/New Mexican file photo ?? Taos head coach Art Abreu Jr. pumps up his team before a scrimmage against West Las Vegas on Aug. 12 at Ivan Head Stadium. Abreu Jr. was cleared Saturday to resume coaching after Taos Municipal Schools found no evidence to back up misconduct allegation­s.
JIM WEBER/New Mexican file photo Taos head coach Art Abreu Jr. pumps up his team before a scrimmage against West Las Vegas on Aug. 12 at Ivan Head Stadium. Abreu Jr. was cleared Saturday to resume coaching after Taos Municipal Schools found no evidence to back up misconduct allegation­s.

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