Oregon basketball rape accuser: 'I am angry'

The Associated Press

Oregon basketball rape accuser: 'I am angry' image

PORTLAND, Ore. — A University of Oregon student who says she was sexually assaulted by three members of the men's basketball team is making her first public statement since the controversy erupted on the Eugene campus.

The statement was published Thursday in the Daily Emerald. John Clune, a Colorado-based attorney who also represented the woman who accused Kobe Bryant of rape, confirmed to The Associated Press that he sent the letter to the paper and the student continues to take classes at the university.

The statement marks the unidentified woman's first public comment on the matter. The woman met the players at a party March 8, the same night the Ducks finished the regular season. The woman's father soon called police.

The university was informed of the ensuing investigation but allowed two of the players, Dominic Artis and Damyean Dotson, to compete in the NCAA tournament. The third player, Brandon Austin, could not suit up because of NCAA transfer rules.

Investigators determined in late April there wasn't enough evidence to prosecute the players. Although they were not charged with a crime, the players were kicked off the team last month.

"The past few months have, undeniably, been the hardest and most challenging time in my life," the woman's letter states. "This is such an overwhelming experience and one that I hope that no other student on campus ever has to live through."

The letter criticizes coach Dana Altman for recruiting Austin as a transfer. A prized recruit for Providence College, Austin was suspended at the beginning of his freshman season in November. Although there were rumors that Austin had been suspended over a sexual incident, Providence officials and coaches declined to disclose the specific reason for Austin's punishment, even to Altman.

The Wall Street Journal eventually broke the news March 18 that Austin had been investigated for an alleged sexual assault while at Providence.

"I know a lot of people are angry. I am angry, too," the woman wrote. "I am angry with the culture that appears to exist in our athletic department that prioritizes winning over safety of our students. I cannot fathom how our basketball coach recruited someone who was in the middle of a suspension for another sexual assault to come to Eugene."

Altman said last month that in retrospect, he should have delved more deeply into why Austin never played for Providence.

UO spokeswoman Julie Brown said Thursday that the university is pleased that the woman is continuing her education and noted that her letter praises the support she received from the dean of students' office.

"There have been many comments made by individuals not directly involved and affected by the alleged incident until today's open letter to the Daily Emerald," she said. "We sympathize with the challenging position that she finds herself in and support her right to express herself."

The Associated Press