New Mexico answering questions about coach
By TIM KORTE
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) -University of New Mexico president David Schmidly
said Wednesday that an attorney representing an assistant football coach sent a
letter offering ``continued media silence'' in exchange for a $500,000
settlement in a dispute with head football coach Mike Locksley.
Schmidly said the overture was rejected.
``I outright refused it,'' Schmidly said during a news conference. ``I
turned the letter over to our legal staff and told them the answer is no.''
Julian Haffner, a lawyer in Bethesda, Md., who is representing receivers
coach J.B. Gerald, didn't immediately return telephone messages seeking
comment.
Gerald, who claims he was punched and choked by Locksley, made his first
public comments about the dispute during an interview broadcast last week by
ESPN. Schmidly said he ``wouldn't be surprised'' if Gerald files a civil
lawsuit against the university.
Later, administrators released a Nov. 3 letter to Haffner in which
university lawyers expressed concern that Haffner had tried to speak to other
New Mexico assistants without the school's permission.
After weeks of criticism over the Locksley mess, administrators gathered
reporters on campus Wednesday to clarify their version of events since the
Sept. 20 altercation.
Gerald said he sustained a split lip when Locksley struck him. Locksley
admitted grabbing Gerald's collar but maintains he never threw a punch.
The latest developments changed nothing for Locksley, who last month served
a 10-day suspension for his role in the altercation. Athletic director Paul
Krebs said the coach will enter an anger management program after the season.
``Coach Locksley's behavior surrounding an argument with a member of his
staff was wrong, plain and simple,'' Schmidly said. ``He has painted this
university, the athletic department, Lobo football and himself in an extremely
poor light.''
New Mexico (0-8, 0-4 Mountain West) plays Saturday at No. 17 Utah (7-1,
4-0).
Schmidly acknowledged the school made mistakes in following internal
personnel procedures as the investigation unfolded. He also said the university
improperly failed to provide records requested by several news organizations,
including The Associated Press.
``We bungled the process in the areas I have mentioned, and we have already
taken steps to correct and refine our procedural issues,'' Schmidly said.
``But, and I want to repeat this, I am not aware of any evidence that would
suggest a cover-up.''
The university's vice president for human resources, Helen Gonzales,
emphasized her investigation wasn't able to corroborate Gerald's claim to
police that he was punched.
Gonzales also said notes gathered by an athletics administrator were not
used in the university's official investigation because that person, Shannon
Garbiso, was not a trained human resources investigator.
She also said Garbiso didn't use a tape recorder to document her meetings
with assistant coaches and later compiled the notes from memory.
Garbiso's notes confirm that Locksley was swinging his arms while being
restrained by assistant Mike Degory. Another assistant, Cheston Blackshear,
reported that ``Locks grabbed him (Gerald) by the shirt and started choking
him.''
Gonzales said her subsequent talks with the coaching staff failed to
corroborate Gerald's claim.
11/04/09 18:37
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