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Hazing News

Former victim in McGill University football broom sodomy speaks out

Here is the link

Read my column in the Toronto Globe & Mail from 2005 when the incident happened: Hank Nuwer

Here is the incident that ended the 2013 McGill football season. Apologies are due D’Arcy McKeown by McGill’s Athletic Director: Moderator Hank Nuwer’s Opinion

How could players charged with sexual assault still play football for McGill? Yeah, that’s the question: Moderator Hank Nuwer

Here is the excerpt from today’s article. And a big thank you to D’arcy McKeown and his father for speaking out. To this day I remember my anger lashing out at a smalltime sports blogger who revealed the name of D’Arcy back in 2005. There has been talk of a countrywide law needed in Canada to curtail hazing.  This case should be on the desk of every voter and politician in Canada.

 

Excerpt

Few know first-hand the fear and humiliation felt by Jonathan Martin, the allegedly bullied Miami Dolphins NFL player.

Or the courage it took for Martin to finally stand up to his locker-room tormenters.

D’Arcy McKeown knows. And then some.

In 2005, as an 18-year-old freshman football player at Montreal’s McGill University, McKeown raised hell after being sexually assaulted with a broom handle in a deplorable “Dark Ages” hazing ritual perpetrated by a group of veteran players.

The now 26-year-old son of investigative TV journalist Bob McKeown (of CBC’s The Fifth Estate, and formerly of NBC’s Dateline) sat down with QMI Agency on Friday in downtown Toronto, his first interview on the subject in years and only the third he has granted.

McKeown shed new light on that heinous night at McGill, as well as on his subsequent heroic stand that made national headlines that autumn. He also shared his thoughts on the Dolphins scandal.

“I don’t think that hazing or bullying toughens up a person on the field at all,” said McKeown who, like Martin, was an offensive lineman in his playing days. “That will sooner rip a football team apart than bond it.”

Born in Toronto, McKeown grew up mostly on Manhattan’s upper-west side, as his dad worked for CBS News and NBC’s Dateline. A Yale grad, the elder McKeown had played for five years on the CFL’s Ottawa Rough Riders in the early 1970s before launching his award-winning journalism career.

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Here is my October 5, 2005 op-ed column for the Toronto Globe & Mail

If recent allegations prove true, sexual hazing has been a barbaric ritual of choice for McGill University’s football team. However, despite increasing media attention since the early 1980s, few educational institutions have faced the sordid reality that males sometimes assault or sodomize other males while hazing.

The dark truth is that some athletes, even some coaches, feel they have the right to certain excesses. Hazing is one of those excesses.

Most hazing is non-criminal. Indeed, many sports programs have positive initiations or no initiations at all — or, albeit foolishly, confine hazing to rookies wearing silly clothing or doing acts of servitude. However, about 20 per cent of all athletes endure acts that fall into the category of severe, even criminal, physical or mental abuse, according to a 1999 U.S survey.

These incidents are disturbing. Recent sexual-hazing cases involving U.S. athletes have seen rookies sodomized with pinecones, fingers, pencils and broom handles — even to the point of rectal tearing. Female sexual hazing and simulations are rarer but do occur. Fraternity and sorority hazing has seen at least one death every year in the past 35 years.

Some educators put on hazing-prevention forums for athletes, fraternities and general student populations across North America. Fraternities, suffering way more deaths than do sororities and athletic teams, have educated new members for years, although sometimes all the efforts go to waste when undergraduates and alumni haze behind house doors.

Silent until recently, the collegiate athletic powers that have been mobilized to stave off the alcohol-fuelled parties, partial nudity and assaults linked to hazing. In September, the U.S. National Collegiate Athletic Association finally addressed hazing in its national newsletter. Last June, the U.S. National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics attacked hazing in its general session.

Yet while anti-hazing activists and campus watchdogs urge coaches to keep an eye out for hazing in locker rooms, team buses and training camps, many coaches say policing is impossible.

When a McGill athletics director told The Globe and Mail, “You can’t follow them around with handcuffs, watching what they’re doing every minute,” his view generally reflects, rightly or probably wrongly, what is said in coaching offices.

History shows us that only widespread student disgust at hazing, when student leaders with perceived status suddenly find hazing uncool, can make any real difference. Before 1930, deaths of U.S. collegiate freshmen and sophomores during college orientation initiations were more common than initiations deaths in fraternities. But when high-status students in the 1920s protested against hazing, the intensity greatly diminished and only one death has occurred outside a fraternity since.

Can there ever be an end to hazing, which was once a shameful Canadian staple in junior hockey and collegiate orientation? Having written about hazing since the mid-1970s, I see the following as essential to curtail hazing:

Annual surveys by colleges to assess the scope and range of hazing by high-risk groups on campus.

Zero tolerance, expulsions and charges for criminal hazing involving nudity, alcohol or sexual abuse.

Educational programs teaching bystanders on campus how to confront and intervene when a dangerous hazing is in progress.

A means for students and faculty to report hazing anonymously.

Banishment of alumni, including former athletes, who encourage players to maintain hazing.

A change in attitude to see those who report hazing as heroes, not primarily victims.

Public condemnation of faculty members who have abdicated their responsibility to oversee the social activities of undergraduates.

The firing of athletic directors, coaches, campus police, faculty and college presidents proved to have known about criminal hazing without taking steps to punish it.

McGill’s won’t be the last blue-chip program to have a hazing scandal.

A respect for human rights must replace human rites.

Hank Nuwer, a professor of journalism at Franklin College in Indiana, is the author of four books on hazing and a contributor to Making the Team: Inside the World of Sport Initiations and Hazing by Jay Johnson and Margery Holman.

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Hazing News

Wichita reporter covers the Hutchison High School alleged branding

Here is the link and a short excerpt:

The charges against the three football players identify the four alleged victims only by initials and say they are 14 or 15 years old.

After the hazing case surfaced, the Hutchinson school district released a statement on Nov. 1 saying that before practice Oct. 31, Dreiling learned that a hazing incident might have occurred. “Dreiling did an initial investigation and then turned the matter over to HHS administrators and Hutchinson Police to investigate,” the statement said. Before Oct. 31, it said, “Coach Dreiling made two announcements during team meetings that hazing would not be tolerated in any form. This is the week when some freshmen move up to the varsity squad, and the coach made the announcements to make it clear hazing was not tolerated.”

In the interview Friday, Kiblinger said the coach issued the admonition against hazing, “as I believe he does each year,” because “he knows that the temptation could exist when they have the freshmen move up.”

Kiblinger said her understanding is that the alleged hazing occurred in a boys locker room.

The coat hanger allegedly used to burn the freshmen was heated by friction caused by flexing the wire, Schroeder has said.

Fee, the father who has had three sons in the football program, said, “Promoting this type of stuff (hazing) is the furthest thing from Coach Dreiling. Most of the kids over there would tell you that,” said Fee, himself a former Hutchinson player and coach and now CEO of the Fee Insurance Group.

The Kansas state law against hazing is K.S.A. 21-5418. In the criminal complaint filed in court against each of the two 18-year-olds, hazing is defined as “unlawfully and recklessly coercing, demanding or encouraging another person to perform, as a condition of membership in a social or fraternal organization, any act which could reasonably be expected to result in great bodily harm, disfigurement or death or which is done in a manner whereby great bodily harm, disfigurement or death could be inflicted.”

Schroeder, the district attorney, said that under the definition of the crime of hazing, there doesn’t have to be an actual injury, “just that it was done in a manner whereby it could be reasonably expected to result” in injury.

Hank Nuwer, an Indiana journalism professor who has written four books on hazing and monitors hazing incidents around the world, said the Kansas hazing law sounds “better than most,” as far as being enforceable.

The key to defining hazing in legal terms is the recklessness or risk of the action, Nuwer said. Hazing, he said, is something “that an ordinary person would consider … risky or reckless or dangerous … and bizarre.” And the case alleged in Hutchinson seems to fit that definition, he said.

In 1924, he said, there was an incident in Brooklyn, N.Y., in which high school students used silver nitrate to brand freshmen.

Rick Wheeler, a longtime former Kansas high school football coach and now athletic director at Wichita Heights High School, said coaches have a number of motivations not to tolerate hazing or anything close to it. He said he is a friend of Dreiling, the Hutchinson coach, and isn’t commenting on the Hutchinson investigation.

For one thing, Wheeler said, “Coaches don’t have time to have goofy rituals.” And coaches hate distractions, he said. High school coaches, in particular, take seriously their responsibility to protect their athletes, he said. “You’re seen as being the guardian for (someone’s) child while they are in your care.”

Read more here: http://www.kansas.com/2013/11/10/3108654/alleged-hazing-incident-shines.html#storylink=cpy
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Hazing News

Hutchison High School branding incident

Here is the story link

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Hazing News

Moderator Hank Nuwer on Channel 6 Indianapolis tonight

The show is on the Miami Dolphins hazing controversy. Link

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Hazing News

Quaker school student loses a testicle in bizarre hazing

LINK

A Wilmington College student lost a testicle in a bizarre ritual involving nudity, according to Eric Owens.

Excerpt

“Things went horribly wrong for Lawrence, the affidavit says, when frat members began flicking the pledges with towels fashioned with knots at the ends for maximum pain infliction.

One of the frat members flicked Lawrence in the testicles. He fell to the ground in agony but the hazing ritual nevertheless continued.

Frat members later took Lawrence to a nearby hospital because he complained about persistent pain after the ceremony was over.”

Read more: http://dailycaller.com/2013/11/07/frat-pledge-loses-testicle-after-hazing-ritual-gone-wrong/#ixzz2jyrbUqz1