OWH:
A University of Nebraska regent was arrested and charged Wednesday with a felony count of witness tampering on allegations that he encouraged a former Nebraska football player to not testify on behalf of a weightlifting coach accused of rape.
Jack Stark, a sports psychologist who was elected to the NU Board of Regents in 2020, made his first appearance before a judge Wednesday and was released on his own recognizance.
Stark, 74, is accused of trying to dissuade Willie Miller, a former fullback at Nebraska, from testifying
at the trial of Douglas Anders, who owned a workout facility for bodybuilders. If convicted, Stark would face up to five years probation or two years in prison.
Stark was the team psychologist from 1989 to 2004. Miller was a fullback from 1996 to 2000.
But in the Anders case, the two were on opposite sides. Stark was endorsed as a witness for prosecutors, and was ready to testify on behalf of the victim. Miller was a friend and supporter of Anders and was poised to testify for him as a character witness.
According to an Omaha police report, Miller, 42, told detectives in August 2020 that he received a text message “from a person he knows and this person asked him not to testify in the case.” That text came six months before the case went to trial.
Douglas County District Judge Timothy Burns
convicted Anders after the Omaha man chose to have a judge, rather than a jury, decide his fate. Burns then sentenced Anders to 25 to 30 years in prison. Anders currently is appealing his conviction and sentence.
Prosecutors never called Stark to testify.
Michael Coyle, an Omaha attorney, released a statement on behalf of Stark: “Dr. Jack Stark has spent more than 50 years in public service to the greater Nebraska community and across the United States. We are in the process of reviewing the allegations and are confident of the outcome.”
Chief Deputy Douglas County Attorney Brenda Beadle declined to comment Wednesday, other than to say that the Douglas County Attorney’s Office recused itself because it had served as prosecutors in the case that Stark is now accused in. The Nebraska Attorney General’s Office is handling the prosecution of Stark.
Asked about Stark’s continued tenure on the NU board, Regent Paul Kenney, current board chairman, told The World-Herald, “We will have to allow the system to work! Jack is a good man and will have the chance to respond.”
Stark made a name for himself as a team psychologist for Nebraska football and other sports. He eventually parted ways with UNL but remained a fixture in the world of sports psychology, according to information on the University of Nebraska website.
A nomination for a local award noted that Stark often donated 30 hours a week to Omaha high school athletes. It is unclear whether that’s how he came to work on behalf of the victim in this case.
She was a teenager who became proficient at weightlifting after training at Anders’ facility. The woman, 24 at the time of trial, had started at Anders’ gym when she was 15.
Prosecutor Molly Keane presented evidence that Anders groomed the teen by telling her initially that he needed to
perform pelvic adjustments to help with her recoveryfrom heavy lifts. Over time, he coerced her into sex.
Anders took the stand and denied having any sexual contact with the teen.
Melissa Lee, a spokeswoman for the University of Nebraska system, issued a statement Wednesday night: “The university is aware of Regent Stark’s case and we are following the developments.”
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