[Vision2020] Spear Responds to Johnson Case

Art Deco deco at moscow.com
Wed May 4 13:38:09 PDT 2011


UI philosophy:  All's fair in love, war, and athletic recruiting.

w.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Saundra Lund 
  To: 'Tom Hansen' ; 'Moscow Vision 2020' 
  Cc: rspear at uidaho.edu ; wcenter at uidaho.edu ; hgasser at uidaho.edu ; president at uidaho.edu 
  Sent: Wednesday, May 04, 2011 1:23 PM
  Subject: Re: [Vision2020] Spear Responds to Johnson Case


  Thanks, Tom, for posting this.  Personally, I found Spear's official
  response beyond nauseating and his -- and by extension, the University of
  Idaho's  -- hubris despicably stunning.  He & Verlin know sooo much more
  than the UoP Judiciary Committee that actually heard the facts from those
  involved and spent hours & hours & hours taking testimony and deliberating
  rather than listening to mere second- and third-hand spin.  Riiiggghhhttt.
  Obviously, the possibility of getting a great athlete no one else would
  touch was more important to "The Decision-Makers" than the safety of women
  in the university community.

  There is so much nonsense in Spear's response one could choose to respond
  to, but I'll confine myself to just one:
  "He said if the facts had supported the allegations, then Johnson would have
  been charged, tried and probably convicted, which would have prevented
  Johnson from enrolling as a UI student."

  Where, exactly, does Rob Spear live because it isn't on Planet Earth and
  it's definitely not in the United States nor in Idaho, otherwise he'd not
  make such a totally STUPID statement.  Even more distressing than his
  gob-smacking ignorance about the Realities of Rape -- acquaintance, family,
  or stranger -- is that Spear plays the "father" card.  I genuinely don't
  know how a "father" could raise a daughter to college age without even the
  barest of knowledge about sexual assault in general and acquaintance rape
  specifically.  Honestly, short of living under a rock on another planet, no
  person of even average intelligence & common sense would make such a STUPID
  and patently false statement given the coverage acquaintance rape in general
  and acquaintance rape on college campuses have deceived for the last TWO
  DECADES or so.  Sheesh.

  Of very grave concern is that Spear is an ATHLETIC DIRECTOR at a university
  making such a STUPID statement.  Clearly, he's dumber than a bag of rocks
  about acquaintance rape, which is chilling for ANYONE in university
  administration in this day and age, no matter how nice a guy Spear is
  otherwise.

  Minimally, Spear should have had the mother wit to actually talk with a sex
  crimes detective/investigator/advocate before making such a STUPID
  statement.  Heck -- there are even resources right there on campus Spear
  could have used to educate himself rather than just staying STUPID.  Shoot
  -- had he even *bothered* to Google "acquaintance rape on college campuses,"
  for God's sake, he wouldn't have said such a STUPID thing!  With attitudes
  like Spear's, is it any wonder acquaintance rape is the MOST unreported
  crime on college campuses?! 

  Additionally, given Spear's breath-taking ignorance, it's not exactly rocket
  science to understand how Verlin could be even more vacuous.  Point blank,
  Verlin should have been immediately sacked -- rather than given a raise when
  so many others at the university don't even have "raise" in their vocabulary
  any longer -- for the ***extremely poor judgment*** of even considering
  bringing Johnson here, let alone handing him a full ride scholarship on a
  silver platter.

  All of that is water under the bridge now, I suppose.

  However, the UI had best start remedial education & awareness IMMEDIATELY.
  Since the Athletic Director is so completely ignorant, every single person
  connected to the Athletics Department needs sexual assault on college
  campuses awareness and prevention training by a ***qualified*** instructor.
  A hint is that you do NOT recruit KNOWN perpetrators.

  Further, given the stunning ignorance of at least one of those responsible
  for athlete recruitment who thought snapping up the expelled Johnson was a
  good idea, ALL current UI athletes should be required to attend mandatory
  sexual assault awareness and prevention training by a ***qualified***
  educator.  Certainly, we can't trust the likes of Spear or Verlin to have
  made wise choices about who to bring here, nor can we trust them to impart
  important values like, "No means no," or "This institution and this
  department has a zero tolerance for sexual aggression and assault" when
  neither saw a thing in the world wrong with giving Johnson a full ride
  scholarship.

  Here's hoping the UI has the wisdom moving forward to make this scandal a
  teaching moment rather than one of defensive justification for the
  unjustifiable.


  UI Alum,
  Saundra Lund
  Moscow, ID

  The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good people to do
  nothing.
  ~ Edmund Burke


  -----Original Message-----
  From: vision2020-bounces at moscow.com [mailto:vision2020-bounces at moscow.com]
  On Behalf Of Tom Hansen
  Sent: Saturday, April 30, 2011 1:43 PM
  To: Moscow Vision 2020
  Subject: [Vision2020] Spear Responds to Johnson Case

  "Spear echoed the sentiments of UI by relating the situation to his
  daughter.

   'I have a daughter who is a college student on this campus, and I am the
  last person who would bring an alleged . well, a sexual predator on this
  campus,' he said."

  This may very well be true, Mr. Spear, but not all female UI students have
  parents on the UI management payroll.


  Courtesy of the Friday (April 29, 2011) edition of the UI Argonaut at

  http://www.uiargonaut.com/sections/news/stories/2011/april/42911/spear_respo
  nds_to.html

  --------------------------

  Spear Responds to Johnson Case

  Former University of Idaho basketball player Steffan Johnson was awarded a
  full-ride scholarship to UI two months after being expelled from University
  of the Pacific under allegations of sexual assault. He was recruited by
  coach Don Verlin, and Athletic Director Rob Spear agreed with the decision,
  but had no direct contact with UOP, and said they were aware of all the
  facts surrounding Johnson's expulsion.
   "You have to understand the facts behind the case, and I am not at liberty
  to discuss those facts, but if you knew the facts as we know them you would
  be making the decision that we did to bring him to this campus to
  participate as a student athlete and be a productive citizen here,"
  Spear said.
   Spear said it was alleged that Johnson had been associated with the sexual
  assault of former UOP student-athlete Beckett Brennan in May 2008, which was
  featured on an episode of "60 Minutes" that aired April 17.
  Johnson was one of three men named in the incident, but the only to be
  expelled after an investigation by UOP's Judiciary Committee.
   Brennan never brought legal charges against the three men. The Judiciary
  Committee was made of three students, one faculty member and one
  administrator who spent 25 hours deliberating, Brennan said. Johnson claimed
  he was not present during the alleged sexual assault.
   Johnson was never charged with any crime in the court system.
   At the time of his recruitment, Johnson had not been officially named as
  one of the students accused in the case, but had been removed from the
  2008-09 team roster along with the two other players who were suspended from
  school and the team after the incident. Johnson had been connected to the
  incident in various media reports.
   "Coach Verlin and I had several discussions about this. Coach Verlin did
  his due diligence with this in recruiting Johnson as in recruiting any
  student athlete," Spear said. "Verlin talked with administration down at the
  UOP, he talked with the investigating police officer and talked with his
  twin brother, who is an assistant basketball coach at UOP."
   Verlin, who declined to comment, relayed the information from UOP to Spear
  during Johnson's recruitment process, according to Spear. Spear also said
  Verlin spoke extensively with his brother, someone Spear said was a reliable
  source of information.
   "I would think that if your brother was telling you that there was a kid
  who played at the UOP who was a model citizen for three years and never
  caused them any trouble, was never involved in any type of situation, that
  you would trust your brother on that recommendation," Spear said.
   Spear said the facts they had gathered from this communication told them
  Johnson would come to campus, be a good citizen, contribute to the
  basketball program and leave with a degree. Johnson graduated from UI in May
  2010 with a bachelor's in communication studies.
   "If you look at our history here, we have made the right decision regarding
  the behavior of student athletes," Spear said. "If you look back, it wasn't
  too long ago that coach (Robb) Akey dismissed 17 scholarship football
  players for not being good citizens, so we have a history of doing the right
  thing, and that history tells us that we are not going to bring in kids that
  are a risk to our campus."
   UI released a statement after the episode of "60 Minutes" aired, which
  stated they were aware of Johnson's past.
   "The circumstances that led to the student's expulsion from Pacific were
  disclosed to the University of Idaho, which considered them before accepting
  his transfer," according to the release. "The University of Idaho takes
  seriously its commitment to creating a safe environment for all of its
  students and does review its student applications with care."

   Spear echoed the sentiments of UI by relating the situation to his
  daughter.

   "I have a daughter who is a college student on this campus, and I am the
  last person who would bring an alleged . well, a sexual predator on this
  campus," he said.

   He said the Athletic Department has received emails questioning how they
  could bring a person who was connected to a sexual assault allegation to
  campus, and said the facts don't back up the allegation. He said if the
  facts had supported the allegations, then Johnson would have been charged,
  tried and probably convicted, which would have prevented Johnson from
  enrolling as a UI student.
   "People are assuming that because Johnson was expelled that he has
  automatically played a larger role in this incident than the other two
  students, and I will tell you that there are facts that we gathered that
  allowed us to make an informed decision on his admittance to the UI,"
  Spear said.
   Spear emphasized that the university did its "due diligence," and said he
  believes they made the right decision at the time. But after the "bad
  publicity" generated from "60 Minutes," Spear said he might not make the
  same decision today.
   "Well hindsight is always 20/20," Spear said, "and if I had known that UI
  was going to be placed in a bad light because of a '60 Minutes' story, we
  might not have done this."

  -----------------------------------

  Convince us, Mr. Spear, that you are doing the right thing before you give
  away tax-supported scholarships to students of questionable ethics.

  Seeya round town, Moscow.

  Tom Hansen
  Moscow, Idaho

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