Diversity advocates know about the attitude of “White privilege.”
But do you know “football privilege.”
At Florida State University, it seems it’s one of the great equalizers in life, especially if you’re a football player in trouble.
Previously, I’ve talked about the Jameis Winston story and the investigation done by Walt Bogdanich and the New York Times. The paper exposed a system whereby the school and local law enforcement failed to properly investigate the rape charges against Winston.
Last week, the Times followed up by looking deeper at police and court records and found that Winston’s case was not an isolated one.
The Times reported: “The treatment of the Winston complaint was in keeping with the way the police on numerous occasions have soft-pedaled allegations of wrongdoing by Seminoles football players. From criminal mischief and motor-vehicle theft to domestic violence, arrests have been avoided, investigations have stalled and players have escaped serious consequences.”
“In a community whose self-image and economic well-being are so tightly bound to the fortunes of the nation’s top-ranked college football team, law enforcement officers are finely attuned to a suspect’s football connections. Those ties are cited repeatedly in police reports examined by The Times. What’s more, dozens of officers work second jobs directing traffic and providing security at home football games, and many express their devotion to the Seminoles on social media.”