🏈 Report: Feds probe Tennessee for sex crimes

The federal government has launched an investigation into sexual violence at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville.

In an email to faculty, staff and students obtained by The Tennessean, Chancellor Jimmy Cheek said the university was notified that an individual had filed a complaint with the federal government regarding the university's response to a report of sexual violence. The U.S. Department of Education's Office of Civil Rights confirmed it launched its investigation on June 29.

"While privacy laws prevent the university from disclosing the details of the complaint, I can assure you we will cooperate fully with OCR as it investigates the complaint," Creek's email said, according to The Tennessean.

pleaded not guilty to aggravated rape charges, with trial set to begin Aug. 24. They were suspended from the football team in November, one day before Knoxville police named both as subjects of a rape investigation. Johnson has since graduated and completed his eligibility.

Lawyers for both players have said their clients are innocent of charges of raping a woman at a Knoxville apartment in November.

Officials told the newspaper they were "in the process of collecting and preparing the information the Office of Civil Rights has requested."

The university implemented an interim policy on sexual misconduct and relationship violence last August, which WSMV.com reports will be finalized in August.

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey said this week that the league is in the process of forming a "working group" to study how to best minimize conduct issues among athletes. He stopped short of specifics on who will form the group or how it will operate.

In May, the SEC passed legislation that banned its member institutions from accepting transfer students with "serious misconduct" in their past.

Auburn coach Gus Malzahn said he thought the increased emphasis on domestic violence spearheaded the move.

"Of course, I believe there should be a zero-tolerance policy as far as that goes," he said at SEC media days. "I think that's what's heading it up, and I would think most people would have that same view."

An Office of Civil Rights spokesperson told the Tennessean that there are 135 cases of sexual violence under investigation at 121 post-secondary institutions, including Vanderbilt University and the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga.

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Tennessee announced Thursday that the U.S. Department of Education and its Officie of Civil Rights is investigating the university's handling of allegations of sexual assault.

According to the Tennessean, Tennessee chancellor Jimmy Cheek wrote in an open letter to campus that the OCR opened the inquiry in late June following a complaint filed with the federal government.

“While privacy laws prevent the university from disclosing the details of the complaint, I can assure you we will cooperate fully with OCR as it investigates the complaint,” Cheek wrote.

According to the Associated Press, as of June 3 the Department of Education currently has such investigations open at 116 different schools across the country, with prior reports naming schools such as Michigan and Florida State among them.

No fewer than six members of Tennessee's 2014 football roster have been accused of sexual violence, per the Tennesseean. Those players include former Volunteer A.J. Johnson and Michael Williams, indicted by a grand jury this past February on sexual assault charges dating to last November; wide receiver Von Pearson, suspended after being named a rape suspect in April; former defensive back Riyahd Jones, who completed his career in January and was named a suspect in a February incident; running back Marlin Lane, who was briefly suspended in April 2013 after being named a suspect in an alleged rape in Lane's dorm room (the alleged victim later declined to press charges); and an unnamed Volunteer named in a sexual assault complaint filed with university officials last September.

Only the Johnson and Williams case has resulted in any filed charges or arrests.
 
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