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UPDATE: Judge Lets Mooseheart Basketball Players Compete—Until IHSA Hearing Monday

Mooseheart Child City gets a temporary restraining order following the IHSA ruling that makes four Sudanese students ineligible.

 

A Kane County judge has granted a temporary restraining order that will allow four South Sudanese students to play basketball for Mooseheart until an IHSA hearing on Dec. 10.

Judge David Akemann said three students could play basketball for the Red Ramblers in games on Tuesday and Wednesday, according to a news release from Mooseheart. The Sudanese players helped secure a 53-21 Mooseheart victory Tuesday against Westminster Christian.

“I am definitely pleased with Judge Akemann’s ruling (Tuesday) with the restraining order,” Mooseheart Executive Director Scott Hart said. “It’s a small victory and we appreciate the ability to let the boys continue to play until we have a full hearing before the IHSA Board of Directors.”

The Illinois High School Association had previously ruled that four young men — Mangisto Deng, Makur Puou, Hakim Nyang and Wal Khat — were ineligible to play high school sports. Deng, Puou and Nyang are on the basketball team; Khat ran cross country.

All four were recommended by one of 1,700 referral agencies that have worked with Mooseheart, and were admitted in May 2011, according to the news archive of the Mooseheart website.

"They came from war-torn South Sudan, and we accepted these students because they needed a nurturing home and education," the website article says.

The four transfer students sat out last season, but Khat participated in the full cross-country season and the three basketball players compted during four games in 2012. Nyang is 7-foot-1 tall, Puou 6-10 and Deng 6-7.

In 2011, "the IHSA deliberated and notified Mooseheart of the 365-day transfer sit-out rule to comply with IHSA regulations. After this time, the IHSA released all four young men as eligible to play interscholastic sports during the 2012-13 school year," the Mooseheart article says.

The IHSA rescinded that eligibility on Nov. 29, when IHSA Executive Director Marty Hickman said the players were ineligible "due to the IHSA’s perception that these young men were 'recruited' to compete in athletics at Mooseheart," according to the Mooseheart website.

"We do not understand why the status of their eligibility is in question," it says.

The IHSA’s notification to Mooseheart stated that the move came after “an exhaustive investigation” and that notification cited IHSA Rule 3.071 and 3.073 as reasons the three players were being suspended.

Rule 3.071 is a prohibition on recruiting — regardless of the student’s residence or transfer status. Rule 3.073 is a prohibition on inducing or encouraging students to attend a school so they may participate in athletics — even if gifts or money are not involved.

“I have no doubt that if Mooseheart did something wrong, they would be pleased and happy to accept the penalty for it,” said Peter G. Rush, the attorney representing Mooseheart. “It’s not in the nature of the organization to skirt or hide from responsibility for what they’ve done. They take responsibility for their own lives but for the lives of thousands of others over 100 years.”

The Ramblers have three contests this week, a home contest they won on Tuesday against Westminster Christian, a 7:15 p.m. contest on Wednesday game at Hinckley-Big Rock and a 6 p.m. Saturday encounter with La Lumiere School in LaPorte, IN.

Mooseheart filed a temporary restraining order on Tuesday in order to let the young men compete prior to a full IHSA Board hearing scheduled for Dec. 10.

"Our main priority, as it is with all children at Mooseheart, continues to be providing them with a home and accredited education.  ... All of our students deserve an opportunity to have a well-rounded experience at Mooseheart, and interscholastic sports are part of that experience. We will continue to support these four students, and any others who we feel have been unjustly punished, by the IHSA or other organizations which may impact their lives."

According to a report in the Kane County Chronicle, the injunction was considered Tuesday morning at a hearing in front of Akemann.

According to the memorandum seeking the restraining order, the IHSA suddenly announced that the players were ineligible "based on a secret investigation but not fact."

"The timing beyond suspect, but most importantly made (at a) moment which ensured Mooseheart and the African students would he denied their fundamental right to a fair hearing before the maximum stain and pain of the announcement could made indelible."

The memorandums argues that:

"(a) the investigator lied to Mooseheart when it asked what the investigator was doing;

"(b) the announcement relies only on frightening speculation and paranoid innuendo rather than the sworn evidence and facts actually presented;

"(c) not withstanding his multiple maneuvers, the inestigator never obtained any new information to allow the Executive Director to renege on his July 2011 Proclamation;

"(d) at the end of the failed effort, the Executive Director contessed to Mooseheart that its archrival — Hinckley-BigRock —was behind it all; and

"(e) the IHSA sat by silently as one of the African Students competed for an entire IHSA cross country season and the other three African Students competed for the Mooseheart basketball team through last week."

Related Story:

Related Topics: IHSA, Judge David Akemann, Mooseheart, Mooseheart Basketball Players, and Sudan Basketball Players

TJ

5:26 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012

"a perception of recruiting'?
Sounds to me like some of the private school athletic powerhouses are just mad that they got out-recruited

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Barbara Young

5:53 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Are these children? We got their heights but not their ages.

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maureen

6:09 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012

"A secret investigation"? If they are students at Mooseheart, they should be allowed to participate in their athletics programs and represent their school.

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Jim Radecki

6:28 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012

The patch should contact Kurt Wehrmeister (Geneva residents). He is the public relations manager for Moose International. It has been reported that these young men from the Sudan were recruited through an organization that places foreign athletes with school in the United States. Probably not how Mooseheart usually finds there residents/students.

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Jill Luminais

7:39 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012

This is sad. In response to Barbara-they are teenagers just tall. I feel it is poor sportsmanship from Hinckley Big rock. these young men have been in the paper several times since their arrival. and if MooseHeart did recruit-why go to the sudan, there are plenty of youth who meet their admission criteria in IL.

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Bballfan

8:21 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Jill,

Did you see the Hinckley-big rock press release? You are uninformed and owe them an apology

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btown95

9:11 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Bballfan,

The timing is very unusual by Hinkley-Big Rock...these three from Mooseheart sat out an entire year last year, if there was question about their eligibility, it should've been looked into then.

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Dale Seidel

9:47 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Just how much hypocrisy are we supposed to be fed? Does anyone think three Sudanese students that just happen to be male, 7'1", 6'10", and 6'9", are randomly selected from all possible Sudanese students in need, randomly placed in the same private high school with an enrollment small enough to be placed in the smallest enrollment classification in the state, funded by an organization that restricted (if not yet) membership to whites only for most of its existence? Why not? Wasn't Sarah Palin the most capable woman in the United States to be selected and chosen by millions to be one heart beat from the United States Presidency? While there are no cows at the Mooseheart farm anymore, I would like to remind you of an old saw farmers used to use. "No matter how many people call rattlesnakes cows...Don 't try to milk one."

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BBG

7:54 pm on Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Our Mooseheart students have come from all over: Haiti, Canada, England, Liberia, Sierra Leone and yes, the United States. We don't "recruit." Our kids come from backgrounds and circumstances that would break your heart. We said from the beginning that we would accept these boys into our school whether or not they're athletes. They are the nicest, sweetest, most respectful boys you will ever meet.

And yes, they're tall. But they're still boys. And they're fascinated with everything they've seen and heard since they're arrival at Mooseheart in the spring of 2011.

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ashley

12:55 am on Thursday, December 6, 2012

Wow unbelievable mooseheart takes kids on from anywhere doesn't matter on height,race, nationality or athletics leave mooseheart and the Boys alone

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Fredrika Rifkin

2:03 pm on Saturday, December 8, 2012

They didn't mention that one of them is the cousin of Loul Deng. I'd like to know why his professional basketball player cousin wouldn't pay for a nice private education instead of sending him to Mooseheart.

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De Bo Chet

11:49 pm on Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Do you know what the word "cousin" means in the Sudan? Of course you don't. ANYONE with the same name is a "cousin". That would mean that the "Rifkin" family in Maylasia are your cousins and should pay for your "basket weaving" class.

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