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Preface | p. xiii |
Introduction: Every Woman's Fear | p. 1 |
Prologue: Under Arrest | p. 13 |
Sexual Liberties | |
Gross Felony | p. 29 |
The Problem Solvers | p. 45 |
Hush Money | p. 63 |
Something Bad Happened | p. 81 |
No Strings Attached | p. 93 |
Above the Law | |
Do You Know Who I Am? | p. 111 |
Put Your Hands Up | p. 123 |
Staying Power | p. 137 |
Criminals on Scholarship | p. 153 |
Bad Heroes | |
Indulge Me | p. 165 |
Sleeping with the Enemy | p. 175 |
Pound of Flesh | p. 193 |
See No Evil | p. 209 |
Notes | p. 222 |
Bibliography | p. 247 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
Besides money, life in the NBA offers vast amounts of two otherthings: free time and sex. A pro game takes two hours to play.Throw in a couple hours for preparation and travel, and thatleaves a tremendous amount of discretionary time. Much of thattime is spent on the road, where NBA players play a minimum offorty-one games a year and spend as many as a hundred nights inhotels. This lifestyle leads many players to spend great amountsof time at strip clubs, topless bars, and other such nightspots.And players' celebrity status attracts a steady stream of opportunitiesfor consensual sex. It is an environment hot-wired to produceallegations of sexual assault. This environment also makesit nearly impossible for a rape victim to file a criminal complaintagainst an NBA player without being labeled a groupie or a golddigger.
To overcome these labels, a rape victim's reputation must beclean enough to survive a relentless, well-financed effort to discredither. Simply put, it takes a victim nothing short of SnowWhite to obtain a conviction in a sexual assault case against a celebratedathlete and emerge with a reputation still intact. Twenty-three-year-old Jenny Stevens said yes when the owner of A Nanny For You—a Seattle-area nanny agency—called on January 4, 2000, and asked if she would accept an interim position with a family in nearby Bellevue. A permanent nanny had already been placed with the family but couldn't begin work for about two weeks. Jenny had previously done short nanny stints with two other wealthy families. She needed the money. She had finishedtwo years of study at a community college, completing a medical assistanttraining program, and was trying to save enough to returnto school.
The agency told Jenny that the husband in the family shewould be working for was an NBA player on the Seattle Sonicsnamed Ruben Patterson. The name meant nothing to Jenny. Shedidn't follow sports and had little interest in basketball. Despitegrowing up in Washington, she couldn't name one Sonics player.
The next day, Jenny went to the Patterson home for an interviewand to meet with Ruben's fiancée Shannon and their threechildren: a thirteen-year-old boy, a seven-year-old boy, and a five-month-old baby girl. The oldest boy was, in fact, Ruben's brother(Ruben is his legal guardian). The seven-year-old was Shannon'schild from a previous relationship. Ruben was the biological fatherof the baby.
Although they were close in age, Jenny and Shannon's situationswere quite different. Jenny is white; Shannon is black. Jennylived in a cramped apartment and hustled for part-time jobs.Shannon lived in a spacious home in a gated community in Seattle'swealthiest suburb and did not work. Jenny and her fiancé,who worked with at-risk youth, had just postponed their marriageplans. Shannon was about to marry a twenty-four-year-oldcelebrity making $1 million a year playing basketball.
Yet none of this seemed to matter. Jenny and Shannon hit itoff instantly, as if they had known each other for years. And Shannon observed that the children were immediately comfortablearound Jenny, an experienced daycare worker who handledthe Patterson baby with ease. After talking for two hours, Shannondecided against hiring the other nanny and offered the permanentposition to Jenny. Her duties would include being homeduring the day with the baby; picking the boys up after school;doing homework with them; cooking dinner; delivering the boysto doctor's appointments and sports practices; and doing thegrocery shopping and housecleaning. There would be someovernights, as well as opportunities to travel with the family. Herhours would range between forty and sixty per week. The pay was$12 per hour. Jenny accepted on the spot, without even meetingRuben, who was away.
When Jenny told her parents she had landed a full-time job,they were pleased. Her mother, a registered nurse, was glad herdaughter was in a home with a baby. Mr. Stevens, a career socialworker who investigated child-abuse cases for the state of Washington,was intrigued that his daughter would be employed by anNBA player. Mr. Stevens followed the Sonics and knew of Patterson'son-court reputation. An All-American out of the Universityof Cincinnati, Patterson had been drafted by the Lakers in 1998before signing with the Sonics in 1999. In his first season in Seattlehe had established himself as one of the league's premier defenders,considered one of the few players in the league capable ofguarding Kobe Bryant one-on-one. He was nicknamed "Kobestopper."The scouting report on Patterson was that a "nasty attitudedrives his game" and "he doesn't back down," both traitshighly sought after by NBA coaches and fans.
Jenny's father knew nothing of Patterson's off-the-court reputationor his background. Neither did Jenny.
Before he became a wealthy NBA star, Patterson grew up inthe Cleveland area, where he had experienced violence from all perspectives: as a victim, a witness, and a perpetrator. Accordingto records on file at the Cleveland Police Department, Pattersonwas held up at gunpoint and robbed while walking on a Clevelandstreet during his senior year of high school. An incident reportindicates that two men pulled up alongside him in a car,aimed a long-barrel handgun at him, and demanded that he removehis shoes and hand over the gold chain around his neckand the cash in his pockets. "Don't run or I'll shoot you in theback," one of the thieves threatened Patterson, who compliedwith their demands. The men then sped off.
In 1997 Patterson witnessed a vicious domestic-violence incidentin which his mother was attacked by an individual armedwith scissors and shouting: "I'll get all you f---ers." Pattersonstepped in and was able to disarm the suspect and the police werecalled. Patterson's mother declined to press charges.
Also in 1997, police were called after Patterson's sister reportedbeing assaulted by him. The report said that Patterson"punched victim in face with closed fist and when victim tried todefend herself, named suspect then grabbed victim by her throatand lifted victim up in the air and then dropped victim on top ofher vehicle and she rolled off and fell to the ground." No arrestwas made in this case, which was forwarded to prosecutors for reviewand dropped.
Out of Bounds
Excerpted from Out of Bounds: Inside the NBA's Culture of Rape, Violence, and Crime by Jeff Benedict
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.