@TerryP From what I recall, the AU players killed in 2012 were mostly in the wrong place at the wrong time. So only the most recent one will I grant you. But I'm not willing to point fingers because they have had one worse incident. When we have had a number of incidents on par with this one, acting morally superior is rather laughable. I hate Auburn for their false sense of moral superiority, I'm certainly not going to sink to their level.
From what I'm seeing, it's not a case of pointing fingers because of one incident. IF we take this story alone, do we see repeated behavior? Yes, the first time with Dismukes and his racial tirade in the restaurant in Auburn—against a female, btw.
Should this past shooting incident be on an island unto itself? Well, in a sense, I guess. Mitchell was carrying and we see from court testimony is was a gunfire exchange. But, then there's both situations at the same place, following fights at a party, where we had players from the same program, and it ends in gunplay.
I go back to thinking about things like "we're dealing with the same core of people;" both in coaching and recruiting classes.
I go back to thinking about Auburn hiring a security group to police its own dorms where players are housed on campus.
Like you, I try to exercise a lot of caution when looking at stories like this one. I know I've said, repeatedly, as soon as we start pointing to something that happens at another school we're almost destined to see it at our own. Nick getting arrested on drug possession...we see Altee dealing with the same. We've seen similar stores out of UGA.
We haven't seen a recurring theme, trend, history, whatever word you want to insert here...with other schools around the SEC.
It's interesting to me that there were admitted disciplinary issues under Chizik and those are part of the reasons we saw him "released." But, the move of hiring Gus removed these issues when he was at the very core of them being at Auburn in the first place? As we've been told, repeatedly, the success of that program in 2010 was due to Malzahn, remember?
If we step back a decade we can say the same thing you're saying here. All schools were dealing with issues. BUT, there was a reason Tennessee found its head coach as the namesake for a mythical trophy awarded due to discipline issues. There was a preponderance of them in Knoxville. We saw the same thing with Meyer at UF.
It's due to these things we've seen, not imagined we've seen, that led me to say that was a broad brush stroke. And, if I may add, things we've seen repeatedly.
One last thought: In UT's case...in UF's case...and in cases at UA, have we seen a mob like mentality trying to delve deeply into the victims lives in order to discredit their stories? Again, like you, I encourage caution in this story. But after a while you have to start saying, "wait a minute here."