Cats2506 said:
PlayerRep said:
Are you saying when the police reported to the coach that no criminal behavior had occurred, that the coach/university should have reported the incident back to the police? Now that's pretty funny. Note that the police had determined that no criminal behavior had occurred, whether a felony or misdemeanor.
A lawyer with the permission of his client can answers questions and provide information to a third party. The lawyer, with the permission of his client who was presumably sitting in the same room, probably gave a preliminary assessment of the facts/case, and said that the case would eventually be dismissed or essentially dismissed. Foley was acting on behalf of the president, and the president was involved in the decisions that were made.
It's funny to see you spout off about the legal system, when you obviously have no clue as to how it works.
pflu knew about the alleged gang rape and didn't report it to his superiors
before the police told him that they would not prosecute, that is why they told him, because he was investigating if he needed to suspend them for 1 or 2 quarters of play
if you know there is an allegation of gang rape against your players you have a moral duty (as the NCAA sees it) to do something about it.
Nope, what you said is not true. Pflu was informed by the police when they told him that they weren't going to pursue the matter--not before. The incident occurred after the season had ended (in Dec. 2010; recall the UM didn't make the playoffs that year), so no one had to determine then whether to not allow players to play in games. You are such a liar.
Quotes from the Missoulian in a Florio article:
"The December 2010 allegations are being investigated under the Student Conduct Code. Although the woman — who suspected she was drugged before the alleged assault — went to the hospital and filed a police report immediately after the incident, no charges were filed. Police cited a lack of evidence, and notified Montana football coach Robin Pflugrad when their investigation was complete."
"The Missoula Police Department’s notification of Pflugrad about those allegations was referenced in the report Barz filed Jan. 31:
“Police provided limited information about allegations to a University employee. The situation was addressed with the students allegedly involved. UM does not have guidelines and procedures requiring reporting of information of the nature received in the manner this information was received.”