In the early stages of the lacrosse case, Orin Starn
distinguished himself as among the Duke faculty members most eager to exploit
his own students’ distress to advance his campus agenda. The Sociology
professor never seemed to miss a chance to condemn the lacrosse players—and
Coach K, after he belatedly spoke up against the faculty mob—as part of his crusade
to transform Duke into a version of Haverford or Swarthmore, schools with
insignificant athletics programs. (In late summer 2006, after months of revelations
of Mike Nifong’s procedural improprieties, Starn even proclaimed that the case nonetheless
needed to go to trial, since
“most Durhamites want to hear all the evidence before passing judgment,” as if basic principles of due process needed to give way to the desires of “most Durhamites.”)
This semester, Starn is teaching an on-line open class entitled
“Sports and Society,” which a Duke press release
breathlessly describes
as an exploration of the “intersection of sports and American culture.” Among the
invited guest lecturers . . . “
sports studies experts”(!!) like Group of 88'er Grant Farred (who perhaps can expand on
his thesis that former Houston Rockets center Yao Ming represents “the most profound threat to American empire”) and former
New
York Times columnist Selena Roberts.
As it turns out, Roberts’ journalistic credibility has been much
in the news lately. After her departure from Sports Illustrated, Roberts moved on to a website called “Roopstigo,”
a “revolutionary digital network that presents original sports content on
demand for fans who demand more.” The “founder and CEO” of this entity is
Selena Roberts.
The site was the talk of the sports world in early April,
when Roberts published a 4000-plus word exposé of the Auburn football program. The
article awkwardly
combined an inquiry into criminal charges against four former Auburn
football players with loosely-sourced allegations of rules violations by the
Auburn coaching and administrative staff. Almost immediately after publication,
the latter part of the article collapsed, as “source” after “source”
claimed
that Roberts had misquoted him, or worse.
The more interesting aspect of the article, however, came in
its first area: Roberts suggested that one of the accused football players,
Mike McNeil, was likely innocent of the charges against him, and had been the
victim of some type of misconduct by authorities. The article never precisely
explained who violated McNeil’s rights or why they had done so; indeed, the article never even fully summarized
the full criminal case against him. Roberts did note that one of his
co-defendants had been convicted to 15 years in prison, but her piece veered
back and forth between a suggestion that a crime might have occurred but McNeil
was innocent to implying that perhaps the whole thing was just a
misunderstanding or even a frame orchestrated by Auburn to get rid of football
players—with dreadlocks—that the then-coach didn’t like.
What made this line of argument so intriguing is that, of course,
during the lacrosse case, this same Selena Roberts had demonstrated not a whit
of interest in due process, or the presumption of innocence, or the need for
prosecutors or police to behave in an ethical manner. Indeed, she had proven
utterly indifferent to each of these themes, and her Auburn article provided no
explanation for her newfound passion. Surely the differences in race and class
between the respective defendants could not account for her abrupt turnabout.
In the event, Roberts’ article hinged on the defense of McNeil,
who was also a principal source for her allegations of rules violations by the
Auburn football team. The man with the dreadlocks, she suggested, was persecuted
by the former Auburn coaching staff, and she came across as utterly convinced of his
innocence. If McNeil was lying about his innocence on the robbery charges, then he had no credibility as a “snitch” (
to use one of Roberts’ favorite words) against Auburn.
Imagine, then, Roberts’ humiliation when, only five days after her exposé
appeared, the
Birmingham News reported
the following:
“Judge Chris Hughes sentenced McNeil to a 15-year split
sentence that includes 3 years imprisonment and 3 years of probation after the
former football player withdrew his not-guilty plea on Monday . . . McNeil, who
wore a suit and had cut off his dreadlocks since his last court appearance on
Friday, was taken into custody by Lee County sheriff's deputies at the end of
the hearing, as his family watched from the gallery.”
The figure Roberts had portrayed as so sure of his innocence
that he would go to trial, only five days later admitted guilt. A cynical person
might suggest that McNeil’s legal team used Roberts as a way to increase
pressure on prosecutors for a better plea deal.
Perhaps Roberts can bring her unique insights on due process
in high-profile cases involving college athletes to Professor Starn’s class.
Starn’s offering is free—proving that you get what you paid
for.
Hat tip--J.
23 comments:
And the hits keep coming. As long as they see the world through the prism of race, gender, and class this nonsense will never end.
It is possible that, like the biblical Sampson, the loss of his dreadlocks reduced Mike McNeil to a mere mortal Durhamite.
But then it is also possible that Roberts is just a hack writer who makes things up.
Factual correction: Orin Starn is a cultural anthropologist, not a sociologist. His appointment at Duke is in Cultural Anthropology.
Anon at 3:35:
Candidly, I can't fathom which "specialty" is more depraved and bogus. The Depts of sociology and "cultural anthropology" at Duke are true cesspools. No serious scholar would go anywhere near either.
roopstigo
ogitspoor
O G, Its Poor!
I wrote Sports Illustrated a letter expressing my -er- disappointment that they hired Ms. Roberts in the first place. Glad to see she is living down to expectations.....
Just a few weeks ago Duke's lawyers told the Maine court that Duke supported "responsible" academic freedom.
Hmmm....Does Orin Starn's new advocacy fall into the category of responsible academic freedom. Or, is it "irresponsible" academic freedom?
Who at Duke decides? What criteria do they use?
Interested observers want to know.
Jim Peterson
Is Selena Roberts a Communist?
Is Orin Starn a Communist?
"The Depts of sociology and "cultural anthropology" at Duke are true cesspools. No serious scholar would go anywhere near either."
LOL. Even a cursory examination of the faculty in the sociology department at Duke reveals this to be false. There are plenty of serious scholars there.
Of considerable interest:
Texas Judge Ken Anderson has just been indicted for three felonies for intentionally hiding exculpatory evidence from defense counsel. As a result, Mr. Michael Morton spent 25 years in prison for murdering his wife, a crime he did not commit.
Mr. Morton has been exonerated and released. The actual murderer has been found and convicted.
It is remarkably rare for a prosecutor to be criminally charged for his intentional misconduct.
Texas has taken the lead. Bravo!
Jim Peterson
In other news, Duke raises fees to pay for student gender change surgery:
http://www.campusreform.org/blog/?ID=4730
Apparently, any number of universities have quietly added sex change surgery to the a la carte options for elective health care. Duke is just following the herd.
"Even a cursory examination of the faculty in the sociology department at Duke reveals this to be false. There are plenty of serious scholars there" So name these so called serious scholars and we can look at their "contributions"
"So name these so called serious scholars and we can look at their contributions."
I don't have to name anyone - that's the point. Pick a couple of people randomly from that department and look at their contributions yourself. If you're not impressed with some of the folks you find there, Donny, then you probably don't have any point of reference.
Anon at 9:18 wrote: "I don't have to name anyone - that's the point."
Actually, that's *not* the point. Instead, the point your very own response makes palpably clear is that even *you* can't name a single serious scholar in Sociology (and the Cultural Anthro Dept. is an even greater joke). These Depts. are little more than AA "dumping grounds." Heck, ask any Duke student where they go for "gut" classes.
" the point your very own response makes palpably clear is that even *you* can't name a single serious scholar in Sociology"
Wrong, sporto. Against my better judgment here, I'll take the bait. Here are three:
Chaves
Morgan
Smith-Lovin
I look forward to your baseless arguments how none of these people are actually "serious" scholars.
I looked at the Soc dept. People look pretty good to me. I dabble in the economics of religion and Chaves stands out as a serious scholar. Most people seem to be doing quantitative research.
MT Maloney
If any of these ass-clowns were any good, they wouldn't be at Duke (or, for that matter, they wouldn't be in Sociology). The entire "field of study" is a sewer.
That is a little harsh. Rodney Stark's book on the rise of Christianity is a great piece of science, and he is a sociologist. Many sociologist follow the work of the great Chicago economists, notably Gary Becker. Not all sociologists are quantitative, but the ones that are cannot be dismissed so easily.
MT Maloney
"If any of these ass-clowns were any good, they wouldn't be at Duke (or, for that matter, they wouldn't be in Sociology)."
Perhaps this is what passes for argument in your world. In the real world, not so much really.
This is horrifying news about Selena Roberts.
Some restrained comments by Mark Anthony Neal:
http://www.myajc.com/news/news/morehouse-spelman-alums-reflect-on-sometimes-tense/nXgbX/?icmp=ajc_internallink_textlink_apr2013_ajcstubtomyajc_launch
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