Sunday, September 10, 2023

war crime: evil congoid (including mug shot) arrested in "random," brutal rape of u of wisconsin coed that left her unconscious, and in critical condition

By "W"
saturday, september 9, 2023 at 04:02:40 a.m. edt

evil congoid (including mug shot) arrested in brutal rape of u of wisconsin coed

they still haven't identified the race of the victims. i'm suspecting she is White. he is an evil black:

https://www.lawofficer.com/brandon-andre-thompson-arrested-attack-uw-madison-college-student/

she apparently had been out partying during the opening of the fall semester when he nearly killed her (she remains in critical condition, according to the police). she is another victim of "integration." will she or other Whites finally connect the dots?


suspected war criminal Brandon Andre Thompson, 26




9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Any motive given?There MUST be a motive--a REASON--for this rape to have occurred.

Yes,the perp is black.

Then think about how many rapes that are committed,which DO NOT get reported.A factor of "x",with "x" equalling 5,10 times or more--especially on campus.

--GRA

Anonymous said...

OH, she was partying. There you go. An excuse for the negro to behave badly. I understand.

Anonymous said...

WHITE WOMAN SAYS SHE WAS PHONE RAPED BY bLACK MSU COACH,MEL TUCKER.(PART ONE)
(USA today)Two years ago, one of the nation’s star college football coaches and a prominent rape survivor teamed up to fight the culture of sexual violence in sports.

Their partnership should have been a force for good. Instead, it has devolved into scandal, with the activist accusing the coach of the same misconduct that both of them preached against.

The accused is Mel Tucker, the head football coach at Michigan State University and one of the highest paid coaches in all of sports. Accusing him is Brenda Tracy, a rape survivor who has made educating athletes about sexual violence her life’s work.

--GRA

Anonymous said...

WHITE WOMAN SAYS bLACK MSU COACH PHONE RAPED HER (PART TWO);HE ADMITS IT.

(USA today)Over eight months, they developed a professional relationship centered on her advocacy work. Tucker invited Tracy to campus three times – twice to speak to his players and staff and once to be recognized as an honorary captain at the team's spring football game.

But their relationship was upended during a phone call on April 28, 2022, Tracy says in a complaint she filed with the university’s Title IX office in December that remains under investigation.


According to her complaint, Tracy sat frozen for several minutes while Tucker made sexual comments about her and masturbated. His violation, she said, reopened 25-year-old wounds from her rape by four men – two Oregon State University football players, a junior college player and a high school recruit.

“The idea that someone could know me and say they understand my trauma but then re-inflict that trauma on me is so disgusting to me, it’s hard for me to even wrap my mind around it,” she told USA TODAY. “It’s like he sought me out just to betray me.”

Brenda Tracy, a rape survivor and advocate for victims of sexual violence, filed a complaint with Michigan State accusing its head football coach, Mel Tucker, of sexual misconduct.
In his statements to the Title IX investigator, Tucker acknowledged masturbating on the call but said Tracy grossly mischaracterized the episode. According to him, they had consensual “phone sex.”

“Ms. Tracy’s distortion of our mutually consensual and intimate relationship into allegations of sexual exploitation has really affected me,” Tucker wrote in a March 22 letter to the investigator. “I am not proud of my judgment and I am having difficulty forgiving myself for getting into this situation, but I did not engage in misconduct by any definition.”

GRA:By black law standards.

--GRA

Anonymous said...

WHITE WOMAN SAYS bLACK MSU COACH PHONE RAPED HER(PART 3)

(USA Today)Michigan State hired an outside Title IX attorney to investigate the complaint. She finished her investigation in July. A formal hearing to determine whether Tucker violated the school’s policy banning sexual harassment and exploitation is scheduled for Oct. 5 and 6, during the Spartans’ bye week.

The stakes are high for everyone.

Tracy says Tucker is following through on a threat to ruin her career and reputation by painting her as a woman who mixes professional and personal relationships and files false reports. She fears he will undo her legacy.

Tucker, who signed one of the most lucrative contracts in college sports history two years ago, could lose out on the roughly $80 million he is owed if Michigan State fires him for cause, which would be a stunning fall from the elite ranks of college coaches.

Reached by USA TODAY on his cellphone Saturday night, Tucker hung up after a reporter mentioned the case. The university declined to comment, citing the need for confidentiality during investigations.

Tucker watches a play during the Spartans' game against Central Michigan at Spartan Stadium in East Lansing on Sept. 1.
USA TODAY typically does not identify people who allege sexual harassment. Tracy agreed to be identified and shared more than 1,200 pages of case documents.

Title IX, the federal law banning sex discrimination in education, requires schools to investigate allegations of sexual harassment that took place in the context of a school program or activity. Such claims are inherently difficult to adjudicate because of many of the factors at issue in this case: a lack of eyewitnesses and recordings, the passage of time and the thorniness of litigating consent.

--GRA

Anonymous said...

WHITE WOMAN SAYS bLACK MSU COACH PHONE RAPED HER(part 4)
(USA Today)The stakes are high for everyone.

Tracy says Tucker is following through on a threat to ruin her career and reputation by painting her as a woman who mixes professional and personal relationships and files false reports. She fears he will undo her legacy.

Tucker, who signed one of the most lucrative contracts in college sports history two years ago, could lose out on the roughly $80 million he is owed if Michigan State fires him for cause, which would be a stunning fall from the elite ranks of college coaches.

Reached by USA TODAY on his cellphone Saturday night, Tucker hung up after a reporter mentioned the case. The university declined to comment, citing the need for confidentiality during investigations.
Sept. 1.
USA TODAY typically does not identify people who allege sexual harassment. Tracy agreed to be identified and shared more than 1,200 pages of case documents.

Title IX, the federal law banning sex discrimination in education, requires schools to investigate allegations of sexual harassment that took place in the context of a school program or activity. Such claims are inherently difficult to adjudicate because of many of the factors at issue in this case: a lack of eyewitnesses and recordings, the passage of time and the thorniness of litigating consent.

Adding to the uncertainty, the institution tasked with sorting out the facts is perhaps best known for missing repeated opportunities to stop one of the most prolific sexual abusers in American history.

For nearly two decades, Michigan State leaders failed to act on complaints against Larry Nassar, the disgraced former U.S.A. Gymnastics and campus physician accused of sexually assaulting more than 300 female athletes under the guise of medical treatments. He has been sentenced to a minimum of 100 years in prison.

Amid its efforts to rebuild trust among students, employees, alumni and the East Lansing community, Michigan State's leaders must now decide whether the face of its prestigious football program is guilty of sexually harassing one of the country’s most influential advocates against gender-based violence.


For some, how the university navigates the crisis will send a clear message about its commitment to progress.

“This goes beyond coach Tucker and Brenda Tracy,” said Jennifer Gomez, a Boston University professor who researches the effects of interpersonal trauma and violence. “What happens here has the potential to be very healing or very harmful for lots and lots and lots of other people.”

--GRA

Anonymous said...

WHITE WOMAN SAYS bLACK MSU COACH PHONE RAPED HER(PART 5)

GRA:There's much more USA Today writes about including detailed testimony from both sides.He claims she approved of his masturbatory behavior and flirted with him. She says,Tucker pursued her and she tried to keep things strictly business.

Who do I believe?Not any lying black,that's for sure.

--GRA

Anonymous said...

>i'm suspecting she is White

Probably. UW-Madison is a pretty selective school, so while there are of course black female students, they are no doubt only a small %, and a majority of female students are white.

Colin Flaherty used to occasionally remind his followers that according to FBI stats, every year thousands of white women are raped by black men, while fewer than 10 white on black rapes are reported in a typical year, and it is often actually zero.

If they say a black on white crime is "random" it's to preempt any speculation that Blacks target Whites for crime, which they do of course.

Anonymous said...

Typical empty minded vacuous negro mug shot. The dude is supposed to be surly and defiant.