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Arbitrator: Mankato University Wrong To Fire Coach

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MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — An arbitrator has found that Minnesota State University, Mankato, had no grounds to fire head football coach Todd Hoffner last May and has ordered that the university immediately reinstate him, an attorney for the coach confirmed Thursday.

Hoffner, who was recently named head coach at Minot State, is considering whether or not he will return to Mankato, said attorney Jim Fleming. Hoffner did not immediately return a message left by The Associated Press, but he plans to hold a news conference Tuesday.

“He and his wife are discussing their options,” Fleming said. “I have spoken to him … he is, of course, elated with the ruling.”

Hoffner, 47, was arrested in 2012 and charged with two counts of child pornography after university staff found images of his naked children on a work-issued cellphone. His case gained national attention, coming just months after retired Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky was convicted of child sex abuse.

But a judge dismissed the charges against Hoffner three months after his arrest, saying the videos on his phone depicted only innocent images of children acting playful after a bath.

Despite the dismissal, Hoffner was suspended for 20 days and then reassigned to an administrative role. He was fired in May for undisclosed reasons.

But in the 72-page decision, arbitrator Gerald Wallin said the university had no grounds to fire Hoffner. The ruling, which is considered private, was briefly posted online by the Bureau of Mediation Services — and obtained by The Mankato Free Press — before it was removed from the website.

According to the newspaper, the ruling says the decision to fire Hoffner came from university President Richard Davenport, who wrote in a letter that Hoffner was being fired for viewing pornography on his work computer and for allowing his wife to use the device. University officials had also accused Hoffner of bringing his young children into the men’s locker room while staff members were naked or partially undressed.

Wallin said Hoffner denied using his computer to view porn, and several people, including students, had access to the device, so there was no proof to that allegation, the newspaper reported. There was evidence Hoffner’s wife had used the computer, but that was not grounds for termination, Wallin determined.

Wallin also found that even if Hoffner’s children went into the locker room, no one took issue until his arrest on the unfounded child pornography charges, the Free Press reported.

Fleming, Hoffner’s attorney, told the AP that the ruling orders Minnesota State, Mankato, to pay Hoffner for his 20-day suspension. It also says that if Hoffner declines to be reinstated and works elsewhere for less money, the university must pay the difference in his salary.

“Essentially, he gets the full benefit of his contract he had at MSU,” Fleming said.

Minnesota State, Mankato, released a statement saying: “As a general matter we can say that employers are obligated to abide by arbitration awards, whether or not they agree with their terms.” The university said it would have no further comment at this time.

Minot State spokesman Michael Linnell told the AP that Athletic Director Rick Hedberg met with Hoffner on Thursday. He did not elaborate and said the North Dakota university would likely have no updated comment until Hoffner’s news conference next week.

“As of right now he’s our head football coach, and we don’t know anything different,” Linnell said.

Linnell said there is nothing in Hoffner’s contract with Minot State that specifically addresses the issues in Mankato, though there is general language about breaking a contract. He did not have details.

Fleming said Hoffner is currently in Minot, but his wife and children are still in the Mankato area, where she works and they attend school. Fleming, who represented Hoffner in the criminal case, said the criminal proceedings were rough, but the subsequent firing took a real toll on the Hoffner family.

“It has been a terrible almost two years, by anyone’s standpoint,” Flemming said. “He was happy to get his job at Minot. You know, he did not think he would ever coach again.”

(© Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)



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