Varsity Basketball Players Raped Teammate and School Let Team Keep Playing
When
a freshman reported hazing, bullies got him back with a vicious attack
involving a pool cue. The school called it a ‘violation of team policy.’
When
a high school basketball player told his coach he was being bullied,
his tormentors retaliated by brutally raping him with a pool cue.
While
the freshman lay bleeding in the hospital and the three bullies sat
behind bars, the Ooltewah, Tennessee high school varsity basketball team
kept playing. Despite the fact their coach drove the victim to the
hospital and the school said it was investigating, the team wasn’t
sanctioned. Instead, it was allowed to play three more games before the
season was canceled. Now the coaches may join their players behind bars.
“Coach
[Andre] Montgomery is culpable and so is the assistant coach Carl
Williams,” a source close to the investigation told The Daily Beast.
“This doesn’t stop with the kids.”
It started in December when the
team traveled three hours from Ooltewah to desolate Gatlinburg for a
tournament. Some time on the afternoon of Dec. 22, Montgomery and
Williams left the kids unsupervised.
“That’s when the first round
of the attacks happened,” the source said. “The coaches left the kids
for two hours to go grocery shopping. How do you expect the house to be
standing after being left alone for so long, even with the best of
boys?”
They “started out on the freshmen in the downstairs
basement,” a source close to the victim said. “All of the freshman got
the pool cue...” That included the boy who would later have “holes in
his pants” and need surgery for the sodomy.
According to the source, the bullies are upperclassmen who apparently hazed all of the freshmen during their out-of-town stay.
Later
on that night they headed upstairs where the 15-year-old victim was
sound asleep and allegedly ambushed him. The freshman fought back
against the licking, which only served to make their blows even more
vicious. This was too much for the boy who told Coach Montgomery that he
was being harassed. Montgomery, according to multiple accounts, marched
over to the cabin and chewed out the entire team.
This reprimand
set off a sadistic trio of basketball players who allegedly ganged up on
their tattletale teammate while he was sleeping. The bullies were two
sophomores: one a “thick, muscular” 16-year-old (who sources said is
6-foot-1 and also plays on the varsity football team) who pinned the
6-foot-2 “scrawny” freshman down, which allowed the team’s 17-year-old
senior (6-foot-4, 230 pounds) to allegedly violate him, multiple sources
said.
Police: Basketball player raped by teammates
Chattanooga News
A fourth teammate whipped out his phone and recorded the horror, multiple sources confirmed.
Some
time after the assault, Coach Montgomery drove the boy to LeConte
Medical Center. Later the Gatlinburg Police Department showed up and
arrested the accused three basketball perpetrators.
The boy was
initially released from the hospital and went back to the cabin where
then he collapsed in a pool of blood, according to multiple sources.
When the severity of his injuries were realized, he was transferred to
the University of Tennessee Medical Center in Knoxville to undergo
surgery. The rape was so brutal that the tip of the pool cue snapped off
inside him and had to be surgically removed, sources said.
The rape was so brutal that the tip of the pool cue snapped off inside him and had to be surgically removed.
The victim is recovering from a ruptured colon and a punctured bladder and prostate, sources told The Daily Beast.
The boy has remained actively communicating on SnapChat and has shared some details about what happened that night in the cabin.
“The boy said his injuries are getting better and that he was doing OK,” the source said.
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Two
of the three boys remain in a juvenile detention facility in Sevier
County and a third has been released. The reasons for springing him are
unclear.
The pair who tag-teamed the boy were charged with one
count of aggravated rape and one count of aggravated assault. The Sevier
County prosecutor could upgrade the charges to four counts of
aggravated rape for each boy and hit all three with multiple counts of
aggravated assault.
It was highly unlikely that other teammates
were unaware of what was happening since, the source close to the
victim, said “there was a lot of screaming going on.”
And a source
close to the investigation told The Daily Beast the boys “may have
changed roles” by taking turns tackling the teen into submission before
wielding the cue stick and plunging it into the boy “through his
clothing.”
The boy who captured the assault on SnapChat was was
interviewed by investigators this week but “refused to say what his role
was or if there was a video recording.” The teen still could face
criminal charges for his chronicling role in the gang rape, even despite
the fact that his parents initially came clean about his involvement.
Eerily,
the alleged senior ringleader had posted on Facebook when he was a
freshman athlete four years ago some rules to avoid getting pranked.
“Rule #1: Never be the first man asleep when you with a group of people #SplashDown”
“Rule #2: Don’t prank everybody else around you and go to sleep. #That’sTragic”
After his name leaked online as one of the accused, his Facebook account got trolled.
“You’re a sick person. What you did was fucking horrible,” wrote one person.
“You’ll get all the ass reaming you can stand where you’re headed big boy,” wrote another.
Hazing
is said to routinely occur in the Ooltewah locker rooms where the
lights are shut off and, in the dark, younger team members are
repeatedly walloped by their upperclassmen teammates.
“The players
cut the lights out so they couldn’t see who it was that punched them
and there was wrestling and horseplaying going on,” according to a
source close to the victim.
Coach Montgomery would be next door to the locker room and would put the kibosh on the asskicking.
“The coach would hear the racket and told them ‘Stop horsing around before somebody gets hurt,’” the source said.
Coach Montgomery’s attorney denied his client presided over such brutality.
“There
is no culture of hazing or abuse at Ooltewah where athletes are
encouraged or taught to violate the law (or even simply human decency)
by teachers, administrators or coaches,” Curtis L. Bowe, III said in a
statement last week.
The source close to the victim acknowledged
that while the attack was ferocious, the boy had mentioned that it
wasn’t the first time he’d been hazed given that the practice is
ingrained in Ooltewah High’s culture.
“They pick on the freshman
students but you never heard of stuff going this far in terms of
hazing,” the source said. “These kids did something that is heinous and
evil to me and how can you even fathom this kind of stuff?”
If the rape wasn’t startling enough, then the school’s sidestepping should be.
Principal
Jim Jarvis made little of the gang rape in an email two days later. “A
violation of team policy did occur,” he wrote, followed by Athletic
Director Jesse Nayadley who said there was “no reason” to look into the
coaches after the attack.
Sources close to the investigation say
Nayadley will be charged with false reporting after he downplayed the
diabolical incident to investigators.
It wasn’t until last
Wednesday, more than two weeks after the rape, that the Hamilton County
Board of Education and high school administration canceled the varsity
basketball season.
Superintendent Rick Smith publicly announced he
was going to forfeit the remaining 13 games of the Owls’ varsity season
to douse the basketball bonfire.
“Since this speculation is
likely to continue until the investigation is concluded, and since this
speculation could threaten the integrity of law enforcement’s
investigation, I have decided to end the team’s 2015-2016 season,” he
read allowed in a prepared statement.
Smith offered up “how
heartbroken I am about this” and that he was going to “develop the kind
of safeguards that will prevent this from ever happening again.”
For the source who’s close to the victim, the nonchalance by Coach Montgomery and the school seemed calculated.
“The
school board members they didn’t bother to come off from their little
vacation and meet on this thing earlier,” the source, who requested
anonymity, said. “That’s two weeks we’re talking about that they had the
opportunity to get a hand on it and they’re waiting till Wednesday?”
The
lip service seemed to have temporarily stalled the outrage since the
team went on to play three games before the administration finally
buckled to pressure.
Meanwhile, Coach “Tank” Montgomery has since
been banished from setting foot on any Hamilton County school campus and
relegated to sorting textbooks and teaching materials at a local book
depository after administrators scuttled the rest of the team’s games,
The Daily Beast has learned. “It’s not a supervisor position,” the
source close to the investigation said.
The source added that
coaches Montgomery and Williams will be charged with failure to report
the rape to authorities and charged with child neglect for leaving 14
players alone in a cabin for two hours.
On Jan. 26 the charged
defendants must appear in Sevier County Juvenile Court room. The senior,
a source close to the rape case noted, will turn 18 five days later.
That means he will be tried as an adult if the case isn’t resolved by
his birthday on Jan. 31.
“And if he’s found guilty and incarcerated,” the source said, “he’ll be moved to big boy jail.”
But the source added that the prosecutor “is not inclined to transfer the case to adult court.”
The Hamilton County School District referred The Daily Beast to lawyer D. Scott Bennett who declined to answer any questions.
“We
are limited by instructions from law enforcement not to comment out of
concern that doing so might compromise an ongoing investigation,” he
wrote.
Hamilton County prosecutors have opened a probe back in
Ooltewah, Tennessee to determine if a history of assaults extends beyond
this rape incident.
Once accusations came out claiming there may
have been more than one hazing incident during the tournament trip to
Gatlinburg. District Attorney Neal Pinkston’s office said it would dive
in.
“When they said the hazing happened on the trip we didn’t know
if that meant getting in the van in Hamilton County or arriving in
Sevier County.”
Most troubling it seems is the collateral damage for anybody associated with the Ooltewah varsity squad.
While their season of 13 more games was over, the freshman teams schedule wasn’t affected.
But,
according to a source close to the investigation, one of the freshman
players who traveled to the tournament and had been a victim of the
hazing showed up to play in Friday’s freshman matchup but was turned
away and told to hang up his high-tops for rest of the season because of
his “association with the varsity team which has been sanctioned.”
Yet
weeks before the alleged rape a Tennessee watchdog organization called
Unifi-Ed had completed a bullying study and when reaching out to
students throughout the state they found that bullying topped the list
of kids’ concerns.
On Monday the nonprofit executive director
Elizabeth Crews sent a letter to the Hamilton County School District’s
chairman and the superintendent detailing at least five blaring ways
that the district was “not in compliance” with state anti-bullying
guidelines.
First, Ooltewah and other schools in the district have failed to give kids discrete ways to report when they’ve bullied.
“Having a safe, anonymous way to report is huge,” Crews said. “Their system has none of that.”
Crews
is also stunned the district remains tone-deaf when it comes to
consequences once retaliation is inflicted after bullying allegations
get reported.
“I haven’t seen where it’s written down anywhere in
policies, procedures or in the student handbooks what will happen if you
do this,” she said.
Anything short of the bullies being tried as
adults for some of the offended students, parents, and law enforcement
officials will be an injustice.
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