Since this piece was published, Jameis Winston was selected as the number one pick of the 2015 NFL Draft by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Despite frequent coverage of Winston’s alleged “off-the-field issues,” the FSU quarterback’s selection was far from a surprise to people who follow football.
On April 30, something surreal is going to happen in the world of sports.
Florida State University’s star quarterback Jameis Winston will likely be announced as the No. 1 pick of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the 2015 NFL Draft. At that same time, audiences in select cities will be able to watch Erica Kinsman, the young woman who accused Winston of rape in December 2012, describe the alleged assault in excruciating detail in the new documentary film “The Hunting Ground.”
Winston was cleared by FSU of any wrongdoing in December 2014. He was not charged with a crime by the state attorney’s office due to insufficient evidence and he has consistently maintained his innocence. The mainstream sports media has not ignored the allegations against him, but they have largely accepted the official conclusions and moved on.
But “The Hunting Ground,” which highlights the allegations against Winston, is out just as the issues of sexual assault on college campuses and violence perpetrated by NFL players have arguably never been more prevalent in the nation’s consciousness.
RELATED: Jameis Winston accuser files federal lawsuit against FSU
Winston’s supporters, and potential future employers, seem unconcerned with what the film portrays.
“From what I know right now, yeah, we’re OK with where he is,” Buccaneers coach Lovie Smith told The Tampa Bay Times in February. “He’s been accused of a crime. There’s an allegation. He was cleared.”
The circumstances under which Winston was exonerated by FSU remain a source of considerable controversy. In “The Hunting Ground,” Kinsman recounts notifying authorities of an assault within hours after she alleged that it occurred. However, according to the state attorney’s investigation, the rape kit she was administered on Dec. 7, 2012 was not DNA tested until Winston provided a sample nearly a year later. That same investigation also found that key witnesses were not questioned for months, if at all, after the allegations were made and Winston was identified as a suspect.
State prosecutor William Meggs told The New York Times last year, “The case was not properly investigated from the start. I mean there were so many things that needed to be done, and did not get done.”
In that same interview he criticized the methods by which Winston was initially contacted by Tallahassee police.
“It’s insane to call a suspect on the phone,” Meggs said. “Had it be done right by the get-go, we might – I’m not saying we’d have a different answer or a different result — but we would certainly have more clarity.”
A DNA match with Winston was eventually discovered by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement but he has maintained that his encounter with Kinsman was consensual. In Kinsman’s on-camera testimony in the film, she says it was anything but.
She describes a harrowing experience of being drugged, assaulted in two different rooms and later discovering the identity of her assailant when he entered one of her freshman classrooms.
She recounts being ostracized by both FSU and local law enforcement, who she claims were more concerned with preserving the reputation of the institution and their undefeated quarterback in the midst of a championship run. “All these people were praising [Winston] … and calling me a slut, a whore,” she says in “The Hunting Ground.”
According to transcripts (available here) from several hours of school hearings, Winston and Kinsman provided starkly differing accounts of what occurred in December 2012.
There are significant details in Kinsman’s story that are in dispute. She testified that she believes she was drugged on the night of her alleged assault, but authorities found no evidence of illegal substances in her system and concluded that her alcohol intake was not sufficient to impair her judgment. Two witnesses — both teammates of Winston’s — have sworn that they observed the quarterback and Kinsman having consensual sex. Winston himself has alleged that Kinsman sought $7 million in settlement money from him, while her team has countered that his attorney first approached them about settling. Some of these details are omitted from “The Hunting Ground.”
And Winston’s defenders have claimed that Kinsman did not contact authorities or make a public outcry immediately after her alleged attack, citing text messages she sent regarding her campus ID. However, she did tweet “someone help me,” and call 911 minutes after she returned to her dorm room. Kinsman’s attorneys have argued that her behavior was not inconsistent with that of a sexual assault victim.
The judge who presided over the FSU hearings wasn’t moved to choose one version of events over the other.
“I do not find the credibility of one story substantially stronger than that of the other,” retired Florida Supreme Court Justice Major Harding noted, according to transcripts from FSU’s code of conduct hearing on Dec. 19, 2014. “Both have their own strengths and weaknesses.”
Although Harding ultimately ruled that there wasn’t enough evidence to satisfy the burden of proof, he pointedly said he was not prepared to accept that Kinsman “intentionally fabricated an elaborate lie.”
Meanwhile, FSU has come out swinging against “The Hunting Ground,” produced by RADiUS-TWC, a Weinstein Company film label, that has partnered with NEO Philanthropy in a campaign to raise funds for “student-led campaigns, public education, policy reform, and prevention approaches.”









