When Ohio State fired an assistant football coach last month after a 2015 domestic abuse allegation surfaced, head coach Urban Meyer said he and his staff knew nothing about it at the time. Now the school is looking into that.
The Buckeyes coach was suspended Wednesday, a month away from the highly ranked team's opening game, as Ohio State investigates whether he chose to ignore his subordinate's violence, reports NPR member station WOSU.
"[Assistant coach Zach] Smith's ex-wife Courtney Smith tells Stadium TV that Meyer's wife Shelley knew of the abuse.
" 'In 2015 I came forward with it,' Smith said. 'I told Shelley, I sent her some pictures, I spoke to her on the phone. Shelley said she was going to have to tell Urban. I said that's fine, you should tell Urban. We can't have somebody like this coaching young men.'
"Smith says she does not know if Shelley told her husband. "
Veteran college football reporter Brett McMurphy, who broke the story of the 2015 incident, notes that if Meyer or his wife — a nurse at the university — failed to report the domestic abuse, they could be in violation of Title IX. That could lead to their being fired for cause.
Smith told McMurphy that her ex-husband had abused her since 2009, and that she had extensive conversations with the wives of Meyer and his staff members about it.
Zach Smith had been on Meyer's staffs for 11 seasons at the University of Florida and Ohio State, McMurphy reports. Courtney Smith ex-wife told McMurphy that she felt pressured not to have him arrested.
"Courtney said she called 911 'a handful of times' over the years but didn't always pursue charges.
" 'I hung up out of fear because I was scared Zach would lose his job,' Courtney said."
The couple divorced in 2016, The Associated Press reports, and Courtney Smith told McMurphy that she recently received a protective order against him.
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