A college football star behaving badly is nothing new. But when the student-athlete in question has previously been accused of sexual assault and his actions take place amid a period of national scrutiny when it comes to the sport — then the stakes are raised.
Florida State Seminoles quarterback Jameis Winston was suspended on Wednesday for half a game for making a lewd and offensive statement in a public forum on campus on Tuesday.
“As the university’s most visible ambassadors, student-athletes at Florida State are expected to uphold at all times high standards of integrity and behavior that reflect well upon themselves, their families, coaches, teammates, the Department of Athletics and Florida State University,” interim president Garnett Stokes and athletics director Stan Wilcox said in a joint statement. “Student-athletes are expected to act in a way that reflects dignity and respect for others.”
The comment Winston made was intended as a nod to an Internet meme, where bystanders shout the crude phrase when a reporter is conducting a live report. “First of all I just want to apologize to the university, to my coaches and to my teammates,” Winston said. “I’m not a me person, but in that situation, that was a selfish act and that’s not how you do things around here, so I really just want to apologize to my teammates because I’ve now made a selfish act for them and that’s all.”
Winston has been a lightning rod during the past year following allegations that he sexually assaulted an 18-year-old woman in 2012. The state prosecutor in Tallahassee did not bring charges against Winston, citing a lack of evidence and problems with the investigation, but in the months since, there has been widespread speculation that Winston may have benefited from special treatment because of his superstar status.
“This is criminal investigation 101, it seems to me. It’s a real failure,” Samuel Walker, author and emeritus professor of criminal justice at the University of Nebraska at Omaha told Slate last year. “The question in my mind is: Are they incompetent or was this willful?”
Patricia Carroll, the lawyer for the accuser, has claimed that police attempted to convince her client not to press charges against Winston and failed to collect DNA evidence from the quarterback. Tallahassee detective Scott Angulo is alleged to have told Winston’s accuser that Tallahassee is a “big football town” and said she should “think long and hard before proceeding against [Winston] because she will be raked over the coals and her life will be made miserable,” according to ESPN. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement did eventually match a DNA sample given voluntarily by Winston to one taken from the alleged victim’s underwear.
Carroll called on the Florida State Attorney General’s office to re-open the case last December. Winston has not spoken publicly about the encounter but has reportedly told his representatives that he had a consensual encounter with the accuser. The local authorities have maintained that the case failed to go forward because the alleged victim broke off contact with police during the investigation.









