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Coach 'proud' of players accused of campus newspaper theft

By The Associated Press
03.04.10

DALLAS — A college football coach is backing players accused of removing every copy of a student newspaper from racks around campus because of a front-page article about teammates being arrested on drug charges, according to a police report.

The incident happened at Division II Texas A&M-Commerce. The coach is Guy Morriss, who also coached at Kentucky and Baylor and played 15 seasons in the NFL with the Patriots and Eagles.

"I'm proud of my players for doing that," Morriss said, according to an incident report. "This was the best team building exercise we have ever done."

No one has been arrested over the removal of 2,000 copies of The East Texan on Feb. 25. Editor James Bright estimated the loss at about $1,100.

Campus police are investigating, school spokesman Randy Jolly said. Morriss has been disciplined, but Jolly declined to discuss details.

The "football players involved in the East Texan thefts" were also disciplined, school officials said in a statement. Athletic Director Carlton Cooper apologized, saying players made "an error in judgment."

"A&M-Commerce does not stand back idly when crimes like these are committed," said Dr. Dan Jones, the school's president. The school declined to say what the players’ punishment was.

Morriss declined comment yesterday through a school spokesman. When reached at home by a reporter from the Associated Press on March 3, Morriss hung up.

Copies of the weekly newspaper, which is distributed free around campus, disappeared the morning of Feb. 25, shortly after football practice let out, according to the incident report. The lead story was about the arrest of two football players on drug charges.

Surveillance video near one of the newspaper racks showed two football players hauling off all copies of the newspaper, police said.

An officer notified Cooper that players appeared to be involved, and the athletic director expressed concern because he "didn't think they were smart enough to do this on their own," according to the incident report.

A day after the newspapers disappeared, police interviewed Morriss at the campus police office. The coach repeatedly referred to the article about the drug arrests as "crap" and said he didn't read it. He then said he was proud of his players, and repeatedly asked how taking a free newspaper could be considered stealing.

A policy printed in the newspaper says the first copy is free, but each additional copy costs 25 cents.

Bright, a senior journalism major, said Morriss' reaction was "appalling."

"He is condoning criminal activity," Bright said. "And to me, that is unacceptable."


Related

Thieves try to silence bad news by stealing campus newspapers

By Melanie Bengtson Since October, 11 universities have reported thefts of sometimes thousands of copies of student newspapers. 12.15.06

Student steals, burns campus newspapers

University of Wisconsin-River Falls junior says he took papers to keep his name out of print after he received an underage drinking citation. 04.09.07

Student newspapers & yearbooks

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