Chase Scanlan reportedly involved in domestic incident before suspension
Courtesy of Rich Barnes | USA TODAY Sports
Chase Scanlan did not play in Syracuse’s 13-11 win over Virginia on Saturday.
Facebook
Subscribe to our sports newsletter here
UPDATED: April 29, 2021 at 12:55 p.m.
Syracuse attack Chase Scanlan was suspended from the team last week after he was involved in what the Department of Public Safety classified as a domestic incident, according to Syracuse.com.
DPS responded to an incident reported on South Campus at 11:34 a.m. on April 18, the day after SU played UNC. The incident occurred just after midnight on April 18 but was not reported until later that morning, according to the DPS crime log.
Photo courtesy of Syracuse Athletics)
According to a Syracuse.com report published Wednesday afternoon, Chase Scanlan was involved in what campus police labeled a domestic incident a day before he was suspended by the team, according to law enforcement sources and people familiar with the case.
Scanlan was not charged with a crime by the university s Department of Public Safety, but Onondaga County District Attorney William Fitzpatrick told Syracuse.com that his office and city of Syracuse police had joined the investigation and meeting with the other person involved.
On Monday, IL s Ty Xanders reported that Scanlan had been reinstated after being suspended from the team for one game, and on Tuesday multiple sources reported that the men s team practiced without Scanlan present, refusing to practice if Scanlan were to participate.
Fingerlakes1.com
Menu
Kyle Evans covers local high school, college, and professional sports on FingerLakes1.com. Click here to contribute to our Sports Page or connect with Kyle using kyle@fingerlakes1.com.
Syracuse attack Chase Scanlan was suspended from the team last week after he was involved in what the Department of Public Safety classified as a domestic incident, according to Syracuse.com.
DPS responded to an incident reported on South Campus at 11:34 a.m. on April 18, the day after SU played UNC. The incident occurred just after midnight on April 18 but was not reported until later that morning, according to the DPS crime log.
Sheriff Conway has no more excuses for not buying body cameras (Editorial)
Today 7:00 AM
The national movement for police accountability finally reached the Onondaga County sheriff’s department on Friday. In the morning, Sheriff Eugene Conway said he would implement a body-worn camera program if county government pays for it. By afternoon, the county executive and legislature chairman promised to appropriate the money.
The sheriff got to the correct result. We wish we didn’t have to drag him there.
The sheriff proposed a body cam pilot program in 2017. It was not funded, and he did not bring it up again. Since that time, the trust gap between police and the public has only gotten wider. The conviction of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin in the murder of George Floyd proved the value of video evidence shot by a bystander, Darnella Frazier. The public should not have to depend on a teenager with a smartphone to capture video evidence of police misconduct.
Syracuse man admits raping girl, 10, to send pics to another ‘girl’ (who turned out to be a man)
Updated Apr 22, 2021;
Syracuse, NY A Syracuse child rapist, whose case caused a political stir in 2019, will spend at least two decades in federal prison after admitting Thursday that he abused a 10-year-old girl so he could exchange explicit images with another 15-year-old girl he found on the internet.
Austin Pratt, 24, will be sentenced to between 20 and 30 years in prison after his plea Thursday to child exploitation and pornography charges, federal prosecutors in Syracuse announced.
In a bizarre twist, though, the “15-year-old girl” who Pratt exchanged pornography with over Instagram turned out to actually be an adult man, federal prosecutors said.