Prosecutors won’t charge man over racist slurs directed at Utah basketball team

An Idaho prosecutor will not file hate crime charges against an 18-year-old accused of making racist comments toward members of the Utah women’s basketball team during this year’s NCAA tournament.

The deputy city attorney for the city of Coeur d’Alene made the announcement Monday, writing that while the use of the slur was “horrendous” and “incredibly offensive,” there was no evidence to indicate the man threatened physical harm to the women or their property. That means the conduct is protected by the First Amendment and cannot be charged under Idaho’s malicious harassment law, Ryan Hunter wrote.

Members of the University of Utah basketball team stayed at a hotel in Coeur d’Alene in March while they competed in the NCAA tournament in nearby Spokane, Washington. Team members were walking from a hotel to a restaurant when they say a truck pulled up and the driver shouted a racial slur at the group. After the team left the restaurant, the same driver returned and was “reinforced by others,” revving their engines and yelling at the players again.

The encounters were so disturbing that they left the group concerned for their safety, Utah coach Lynne Roberts said a few days later.

Far-right extremists have been present in the region for years. According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, there were at least nine hate groups active in the Spokane and North Idaho area in 2018.

“We had several examples of racist hate crimes against our program [it was] incredibly disturbing for all of us,” Roberts said. “In our world, in athletics and in universities, it is shocking. There is so much diversity on a university campus and you don’t come into contact with that very often.”

University of Utah officials declined to comment Wednesday on the prosecutor’s decision.

In the document detailing the decision, Hunter said police interviewed more than 20 witnesses and pored over hours of surveillance footage. Several credible witnesses described a racial slur being hurled at the group as they walked to dinner, but their descriptions of the vehicle and the person shouting the slur varied, and police could not hear any sound of the shouting on the surveillance tapes. .

There was also no evidence linking the encounter before the team arrived at the restaurant to what happened when they left, Hunter wrote. But police were able to identify the occupants of a vehicle involved in the second encounter, and one of them — an 18-year-old high school student — reportedly admitted to shouting a slur and an obscene statement at the group, Hunter said.

Prosecutors considered whether to file three possible charges against the man – malicious harassment, disorderly conduct or disturbing the peace – but decided they did not have enough evidence to support any of the three charges. That’s because Idaho’s hate crime law makes racial harassment a crime only if it is done with the intent to threaten or cause physical harm to a person or their property. The man who shouted the slur told police he did it because he thought it would be funny, Hunter wrote.

“Beyond the absurdity of that statement and the hideously disgusting thought process required to believe that it would be humorous to say something so disgusting,” it undermines the premise that the man had the specific intent to intimidate and harass, Hunter wrote.

The hate speech also did not meet Idaho’s disorderly conduct and disturbing the peace requirements, which mainly deal with when and where noise or unruly behavior occurs. The insults were shouted on a busy thoroughfare in the early evening hours, so the level of noise was not unusual for that time and place.

Hunter wrote that his office shares in the outrage caused by the man’s “horribly racist and misogynistic statement, and we join us in unequivocally condemning that statement and the use of racial slurs in this case or under any circumstances then. But under current law, that cannot form the basis for criminal prosecution in this case.”