Franklin, PSU facing federal lawsuit for hazing

NCAAF

Former Penn State football player Isaiah Humphries filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday against Penn State, coach James Franklin and former teammate, Damion Barber.

The suit alleges Humphries was subject to hazing brought on by Barber, linebacker Micah Parsons, defensive lineman Yetur Gross-Matos and linebacker Jesse Luketa, and that the coaching staff was aware of the hazing and did not protect Humphries.

The allegations include instances of the players named collectively orchestrating, directing and facilitating a campaign to harass and haze lower classmen members of the Penn State football team. The hazing alleged in the suit includes the participants stating they intended to make the lower classmen, “their bitch because this is a prison.”

The participants allegedly also referenced former disgraced defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky, by exclaiming, “I am going to Sandusky you.” The actions included wrestling underclassmen to the ground, while maintaining restraint, simulating a humping action, wrestling the underclassmen to the ground while another participant placed his genitals on the face of the underclassmen and even instances of the participants placing their genitals on the buttocks of the alleged victims, stroking their genitalia.

Humphries is being represented by Philadelphia attorney Steven Marino, who says the incident is not isolated to just his client.

“Isaiah attended the school during the calendar year of 2018, he leaves Penn State to another school where he’s offered a scholarship in December, 2018,” Marino said. “The events that arise to an investigation conducted by Penn State’s office of sexual misconduct and response, that doesn’t arise until May 2019. That investigation was triggered by an anonymous tip and the source of that tip was not my client.”

The results of the investigation were then submitted to the Penn State University office of student conduct, according to the lawsuit, and the office of student conduct prosecuted charges lodged against Barber. It is not clear, however, what specific student conduct rule violation he was charged with.

Barber was suspended for the first game of the season against Idaho for what was termed at the time of the suspension as a violation of team rules, but played in the second game of the season against Buffalo.

Marino says the father of his client, Leonard Humphries, notified the Penn State coaches of the hazing and that no action was taken at the time of those complaints. Leonard is a former Penn State football player himself and was drafted by the Buffalo Bills in the 1992 NFL draft.

“This is a family with a football pedigree,” Marino said. “The father knows the coaches and told them what was happening to his son as it was reported to him by his son. No affirmative action was taken to protect this student athlete at that time.”

The lawsuit goes on to allege the coaching staff knew about the hazing and on multiple occasions, “Observed the harassment and hazing which the plaintiff and other lower classmen were being subjected to in the football locker room.”

Humphries is alleging the coaching staff overly and unfairly scrutinized his athletic performance for reporting the harassment and that he was scorned and punished by the staff.

Humphries left the Penn State team in 2018 and enrolled at Cal, where he is now a part of the Bears football program.

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