Former Auburn softball player alleges abuse, sexual harassment in 14-page complaint
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By Tom Junod and Paula Lavigne | Aug 27, 2017
ESPN
A former Auburn softball player sent a 14-page complaint alleging abusive treatment by the Tigers coaching staff, a pattern of sexual harassment and concerns about administrative cover-up to school officials and Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey a month before the abrupt retirement Wednesday of head coach Clint Myers.
The letter, sent by Milwaukee attorney Martin Greenberg on behalf of former player Alexa Nemeth, came weeks after Nemeth filed a Title IX sexual discrimination complaint with the school claiming "Coach Clint Myers knowingly let his son Corey Myers have relations and pursue relations with multiple members of the team." Nemeth was cut from the team by Clint Myers following the 2017 season.
Greenberg's letter alleges that on March 30, 2017, "several players approached Head Coach Myers with proof in the form of text messages from a student-athlete's cell phone that Coach Corey was having an inappropriate relationship with one of the student-athletes."
According to the letter and several players, the team was then "quarantined" for several hours prior to a trip to Georgia. Five players told ESPN that, at that meeting, Auburn executive associate athletic director Meredith Jenkins told the players they were risking arrest for taking the text messages from their teammate's phone and ordered them to delete the messages.
Corey Myers, Auburn's associate head coach and Clint Myers' youngest son, resigned prior to the Georgia trip.
Corey Myers could not be reached for comment. Auburn officials declined to answer specific questions from ESPN about the allegations and team culture, but issued the following statement: "As information became known to us, the university acted upon it, following guidelines and/or procedures, to learn the facts and take appropriate action. The well-being of student-athletes was and is our utmost concern."
Auburn officials and Clint Myers have been aware of the allegations for months. Over the past five months, an ESPN reporter has spent several days with the Auburn team and coaching staff and conducted dozens of interviews.
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