I still come back to one thought, Sean. As bad as this is, as much as something has to be done, I still don't see this as under the NCAA's authority. I still don't believe it was the NCAA's issue in the first place to have anything to do with Penn State. And, after they decided to ride their high horse, in the end they realized they'd over-stepped their boundaries.
Just because this guy is a member of the football program, and is employed by Baylor, what advantage does this give Baylor over other schools? There is a cultural problem there it appears. But, simply punishing the football program (or athletic department) isn't going to stop said behavior.
I don't see this as an NCAA issue, or a SACS issue, or a Title IX issue. It's a Waco PD, TBI, or some law enforcement division ordeal to handle.
yeah, i can get on board with that. after thinking about it and reading your post, i can see where it's not an ncaa issue, but a legal one.
still, not a lot has been done by those types of departments to show that they've been capable of doing anything about it.
the guy was exchanging inappropriate texts with a teenager, apparently. one the one hand, you can say that he can be charged with solicitation of a minor. although it probably wouldn't hold up in court as the law states it has to be for the purpose of engaging in a sexual act, even though we haven't seen the texts themselves or know what his end-game was (and probably never will).
also, a person can be a teenager and be an adult at the same time. being 18 or 19 is still considered a teenager, and also considered an adult. so if the recipient of his texts was 18 or 19, then that person is an adult and is responsible for their own acts. unfortunately, the story doesn't allude to the actual age, just that they were a teenager. again, we don't know the age of the person receiving the texts and may never know thanks to the media and how they have their own agenda on how things should be seen, heard, and perceived. but that's a discussion for another time.....
if the person was, indeed, 18 or 19, then i think the only person he needs to answer to is his wife/family, if he's married. creepy and weird? sure. but not illegal. if the person is 18/19 then they are a consenting adult.
i am in no way advocating what he did is ok if the person is an underage teenager. but if the person is indeed an adult, then no one has any say-so in what they do with another person, as long as it's legal.