Baylor: Ken Starr bumped from presidency; football coach suspended

Baylor University dumped Ken Starr as its president Thursday after unveiling the results of an independent investigation that showed a “fundamental failure” to respond adequately to student sex assault allegations, including some involving players for the Texas school’s rising football program.

Starr, whose investigation led to the impeachment of President Bill Clinton in the 1990s over the Monica Lewinsky sex scandal, will become the school’s chancellor, the Board of Regents said in a statement Thursday. He also will continue to teach at the university’s law school.

CNN contacted Starr for comment, but he has not responded.

The board also suspended football coach Art Briles and said it intends to fire him. Other unidentified members of the school administration and the Athletic Department were also dismissed. The board said it would not identify them.

“We were horrified by the extent of these acts of sexual violence on our campus,” said Richard Willis, chair of the Baylor Board of Regents. “This investigation revealed the University’s mishandling of reports in what should have been a supportive, responsive and caring environment for students. The depth to which these acts occurred shocked and outraged us.”

How we got here

Two Baylor football players have been convicted of sexual assault, and victims who spoke to CNN said the school failed to take their allegations seriously.

In one case involving a player, former Baylor student Jasmin Hernandez is suing the school over how it handled her sex assault case. She says it failed to properly investigate her allegation that football player Tevin Elliott raped her in 2012.

Elliott was convicted and is serving a 20-year sentence.

Hernandez said the lack of response from school officials left her felling “just being completed ignored and sort of pushed under the rug.”

Hernandez’s grades suffered, and she eventually lost her scholarship.

Her attorney, Irwin Zalkin, said school officials knew what was happening and tried to keep it quiet.

“Absolutely there was a cover-up,” he said. “The reality is it tends to be all about the money.”

Another high-profile case involved that of Sam Ukwuachu, a football player who transferred to Baylor from Boise State University after being dismissed for undisclosed reasons that Texas Monthly said involved a “previous incident of violence involving a female student.”

Last year, he was convicted of sexually assaulting a Baylor student.

The investigation

The report for Baylor, conducted by the Pepper Hamilton law firm, found the school’s “student conduct processes were wholly inadequate to consistently provide a prompt and equitable response” and “failed to consistently support complainants.”

“Actions by University administrators directly discouraged some complainants from reporting or participating in student conduct processes and in one instance constituted retaliation against a complainant for reporting sexual assault,” the report found, according to the university’s statement.

The school also found problems inside the Athletic Department, “including a failure to identify and respond to a pattern of sexual violence by a football player and to a report of dating violence.”

“There are significant concerns about the tone and culture within Baylor’s football program as it relates to accountability for all forms of student athlete misconduct,” the university quoted the findings as saying.

What happens next?

The school said it will create a high-level task force to implement recommendations contained in the report, including:

— Looking at all cases of “interpersonal violence” over the last three years to “offer remedies, identify any current need for investigation, or isolate any broad pattern or cultural implications.”

— Establishing protocols “to balance individual requests for anonymity with broader campus safety obligations.”

— Making it clear to employees that they could be fired for failing to abide by reporting obligations regarding sexual assault, and will require annual training for all students, faculty, employees and contractors.

— Expanding its counseling offerings to help sex assault victims.

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