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sooner78wakeboard
Sooner Born, Sooner Bred
This article got me thinking about Baylor being able to coverup or hide things that go wrong or indiscressions within' the program. You know, we hear about what goes on in a program if a player gets in legal trouble. Wheter it's OU, Ohio State, FSU, LSU or mostly anyprogram. Not saying something will get done but it's out in the open.
But perhaps Baylor football has grown so much so quick that they don't want anything to come out that would have a negitive look at the their program. Police, DA's, Defense Attorney's, and Victim's all being issued gag orders.
The Baylor Football Sexual Assault Trial You Haven't Heard About
On Oct. 20, 2013, at 3:09 p.m., the call came to Waco police from Baylor Scott & White hospital saying a woman had been sexually assaulted earlier in the morning. Police began their investigation, and the woman identified the attacker as someone she knew, incoming football player Sam Ukwuachu, a Pearland, Texas, product who had transferred to Baylor after being dismissed months earlier from Boise State. But the many questions that seem like natural follow-ups—what did the woman say happened, what were the findings of the investigation, why did police not bring charges but a grand jury hand down an indictment—remain a mystery, even as Ukwuachu’s trial gets underway.
But perhaps Baylor football has grown so much so quick that they don't want anything to come out that would have a negitive look at the their program. Police, DA's, Defense Attorney's, and Victim's all being issued gag orders.
The Baylor Football Sexual Assault Trial You Haven't Heard About
On Oct. 20, 2013, at 3:09 p.m., the call came to Waco police from Baylor Scott & White hospital saying a woman had been sexually assaulted earlier in the morning. Police began their investigation, and the woman identified the attacker as someone she knew, incoming football player Sam Ukwuachu, a Pearland, Texas, product who had transferred to Baylor after being dismissed months earlier from Boise State. But the many questions that seem like natural follow-ups—what did the woman say happened, what were the findings of the investigation, why did police not bring charges but a grand jury hand down an indictment—remain a mystery, even as Ukwuachu’s trial gets underway.