The Times begins a Jan. 5, 2013 editorial by referencing the Florida
Board of Governors’ (BOG) preliminary report on the FAMU anti-hazing program.
It then goes on to claim that “FAMU officials turned a blind eye to the hazing,”
as if that was one of the findings from the BOG investigation.
But of course, the editorial board omitted BOG Inspector General
Derry Harper’s statement that “From 2007 to 2011, the FAMU Police Department investigated
17 alleged criminal hazing violations.”
The editorial board knew it could not explain how FAMU could
conduct regular criminal investigations into reported hazing at the same time
it was somehow turning “a blind eye” to hazing. So the editorial board simply declined to mention FAMU’s
17 criminal probes into hazing allegations at the school.
A recent Associated Press article reported that “Many police
investigations into hazing [at FAMU] went nowhere because students stonewalled
and refused to cooperate.”
But the Times editorial board would rather have people think that FAMU looked the other way and basically ignored alleged hazing. It wants its readers to believe that there “was a culture of de facto FAMU-sanctioned violence” despite the fact that FAMU tried to get criminal charges filed against students who reportedly engaged in hazing.
But the Times editorial board would rather have people think that FAMU looked the other way and basically ignored alleged hazing. It wants its readers to believe that there “was a culture of de facto FAMU-sanctioned violence” despite the fact that FAMU tried to get criminal charges filed against students who reportedly engaged in hazing.
The Times’ editorial staff also excluded Harper’s statement that “the allegation that FAMU staff failed to adequately address complaints of hazing by former Director of Bands was unsubstantiated.” If it had included that information, it would have undercut the editorial board’s own claim that FAMU was doing little to stop hazing.
And then there is the half-baked statement that FAMU “repeatedly
failed to follow up with law enforcement on at least nine earlier assaults on
band members to determine if long-standing rules governing student conduct had
been violated.”
The BOG report really says that FAMU police failed to refer nine alleged cases of hazing that they investigated over to the Judicial Affairs Office. That was an inexcusable oversight. But it reflected what Harper called a problematic “communications protocol” rather than a university-wide indifference to hazing, as the Times editorial board seems to want people to believe.
The BOG report really says that FAMU police failed to refer nine alleged cases of hazing that they investigated over to the Judicial Affairs Office. That was an inexcusable oversight. But it reflected what Harper called a problematic “communications protocol” rather than a university-wide indifference to hazing, as the Times editorial board seems to want people to believe.
It’s also funny that the Times editorial board quotes
Chancellor Frank Brogan’s criticism against FAMU’s anti-hazing program but says
nothing about Florida Auditor General David Martin's criticism against the BOG's lack of leadership in the fight against hazing. Martin said the BOG put students at risk by failing to adopt a detailed regulation that sets specific minimum standards for anti-hazing programs at public universities.
This is much like the slanted ink the Times editorial board (formerly
the St. Petersburg Times) used to attack the FAMU College of Law.
The Times editorial board tried to get its readers to
believe that FAMU was nowhere close to satisfying the bar passage rate that the
American Bar Association (ABA) required for accreditation. In a May 2008
editorial, the board said that FAMU’s law students “tend to do abysmally on the
bar exam.” The statement ignored the fact that the data on file with the ABA
and the Florida Board of Bar Examiners showed that the overwhelming majority of
FAMU law students were passing the bar exam.
But this is the Tampa Bay Times editorial board. Who really
expects it to print anything other than misleading information about FAMU?
You should write a letter to the editor
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