Cork GainesGerald Herbert/AP
Court documents from a 2001 lawsuit have been obtained
by Shaun King of the New York Daily News
and paint an ugly picture of an alleged sexual assault committed by
Peyton Manning during his time at the University of Tennessee,
accusations of a cover-up, and allegations that both Manning and his
father, former NFL quarterback Archie Manning, participated in a smear
campaign against the alleged victim.
The incident occurred during the spring of 1996. Manning, then a
sophomore, was being examined by a female athletic trainer. That
trainer,
Dr. Jamie Naughright, is described by King as having gone
on to become "a respected scholar, speaker, professor, and trainer of
some of the best athletes in the world."
Business Insider read the documents, in which Naughright
described an incident in which she was examining Manning for a possible
stress fracture in his foot, when he "intentionally and in order to
disrespect Dr. Naughright, placed his '...naked butt and rectum...' on
her face."
Here is how Dr. Naughtright described the incident:
Q. Let me be very clear there. It was not
just his behind, his rear end, that was on your face, but his genitalia
was on your face?
A. That's correct. It was the. gluteous
maximus, the rectum, the testicles. and the area in between the
testicles. And all that was on my face when I pushed him up and off. And
it was like this and as I pushed him up to get leverage. I took my head
out to push him up and off.
Q. And what, if' anything, did Mr.
Manning — withdrawn. Did you say anything or scream or as you felt this
on the top of your head?
A. I pushed him off of me and I said, "You're an ass."
Q. Did you yell or scream or anything like that?
A. When he turned around and looked at me
with the anger in his eyes that I saw, I did not want to get
confrontational with him. I could see that anger and when I looked at [another student-athlete, Malcolm] Saxon he was just shocked. He had his mouth wide open and he was in shock. In disbelief.
Q. What did Mr. Manning say, if anything, to you after you told him he was an ass?
A. He had anger and he smirked and he laughed.
Naughright reported the incident to the Sexual Assault Crisis Center in Knoxville "within hours" of the incident.
According to the document, there was a previous incident between the
two in 1994, during Manning's freshman year, "which will not only
explain the genesis for Peyton Manning's dislike for Dr. Naughright but
will be relevant to understanding the 1996 incident."
This previous incident was filed under seal and not included in the documents obtained by the Daily News.
The document also reveals details of the allegations of the coverup by the school.
- According to the document, Manning initially denied that anything had happened between him and the trainer.
- Naughright's boss, associate trainer Mike Rollo, claimed that
Manning was mooning another athlete, Malcolm Saxon. Rollo later admitted
in his deposition that he was the first person to describe the incident
as a "mooning."
- The document notes that after Rollo called the incident a "mooning,"
Manning started to use this term "with a vengeance" to describe the
incident.
- According to the document, Saxon executed an affidavit which "clearly refutes Peyton Manning's version of the incident."
- According to Naughright, the school asked her to change her story
and claim that the reason she would later leave the school was because
an African-American athlete had exposed himself to her and that
Manning's alleged assault was not the reason.
- Naughright even claimed that the school gave her the name of a specific African-American athlete she could blame.
In 1997, Naughright did leave the school as part of a settlement agreement.
Naughright also detailed allegations of intimidation, including two
incidents in which she claims that Manning saw her in the locker room
and then proceeded to pull his pants down and sit on another athlete's
face in what was described by the documents as "reenactments" if the
alleged assault.
Later, Naughright received an envelope addressed to "Dr. Vulgar Mouth
Whited" (Whited is Naughright's married named). The envelope contained
xerox copies of pages from "Manning," a book written by Peyton Manning,
Archie Manning, and a ghost writer. Naughright alleged in her lawsuit
that depictions of the incident between her and Manning in the book led
to her being demoted and eventually let go from her job at the time at
Florida Southern College.
According to the document, during a conversation between Archie
Manning and the ghostwriter, the elder Manning referred to Naughright as
"kinda trashy," "had a vulgar mouth," and spent a lot of time "out with
a lot of black guys and up in the dorm." The document states that
Archie Manning later admitted during a deposition that his comments were
derogatory.
This book also led to the 2001 lawsuit which Naughright alleged that
the book broke a confidentiality agreement that she and Manning had
signed while at the University of Tennessee.
The suit was settled in 2003. Terms of the suit were not disclosed.
We have reached out to Manning's agent for comment.
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