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The University of Texas at Austin has fired Texas basketball coach Chris Beard weeks after he was charged with a third-degree felony for family violence, university officials said Thursday.
“The University of Texas has parted ways with Chris Beard,” Texas athletic director Chris Del Conte said in a statement. “This has been a difficult situation that we’ve been diligently working through.”
Beard was arrested on Dec. 12 for allegedly strangling his fiancee, Randi Trew, after Austin police responded to a 911 call at a Tarrytown home early that morning.
Beard’s contract contained a standard clause among agreements with UT-Austin that allows the university to suspend or fire him with cause for any behavior that is “unbecoming” or leads to a criminal charge “involving a felony, or any crime involving theft, dishonesty, or moral turpitude,” according to the Austin American-Statesman.
Since Beard was fired for cause, the university does not need to pay out the remainder of his contract, according to UT-Austin senior communications manager Brian Davis.
Beard was in his second season of a seven-year contract with Texas that paid around $5 million annually, as well as additional perks. He was one of the university’s highest-paid employees.
According to a copy of the arrest affidavit posted on Twitter by Orangebloods reporter Anwar Richardson, Beard’s fiancee alleged that the two got in an argument when she grabbed Beard’s glasses out of his hands and broke them. She alleged that he slapped her glasses off her face and then choked her with his arm from behind for around five seconds.
“He choked me, threw me off the bed, bit me, bruises all over my leg,” she told police, according to the affidavit. Trew told police that she could not breathe while Beard had his arm around her neck. In the affidavit, police noted visible teeth marks and redness in a bite mark on her right forearm.
Following the arrest, UT-Austin suspended Beard, withheld his pay and launched an internal investigation.
“The University takes matters of interpersonal violence involving members of its community seriously,” university officials said in a statement.
On Dec. 23, Trew released a statement on Twitter denying that Beard strangled her and stating that Beard told police he was acting in self-defense.
“I do not refute that,” she said in the statement. “I do not believe Chris was trying to intentionally harm me in any way. It was never my intent to have him arrested or prosecuted.”
In a statement to the Statesman, Beard’s lawyer Perry Minton called Trew “a smart and independent woman.”
“I think everyone should allow her to have her voice in this matter,” he said.
The university said at the time it was reviewing the statement from Trew. According to records obtained by the Statesman via an open records request, Beard was offered a chance to resign but refused.
According to the Statesman, Minton wrote to UT saying, “I want to be on record as emphatically stating, and herein memorializing, that Coach Beard has not done anything to violate any provision of his contract with the University of Texas.”
Minton did not immediately respond to The Texas Tribune’s request for comment on Beard’s firing.
While Beard could sue the university over the termination, it could be a difficult case to win.
Texas law protects the state and its entities from lawsuits, even in cases in which an entity violates a contract. Former Texas Tech University football coach Mike Leach — who died suddenly last month from complications of a heart attack — was caught in a legal battle with the university since 2009 over his firing, accusing the university of wrongful termination.
Associate head coach Rodney Terry will remain UT’s acting head coach for the rest of the Longhorn season.
“We thank Coach Rodney Terry for his exemplary leadership both on and off the court at a time when our team needed it most,” Del Conte said.
Beard has a hearing in Travis County District Court on Jan. 18. Prosecutors in the Travis County District Attorney’s office are reviewing the case to see if it will go forward.
Disclosure: Texas Tech University and University of Texas at Austin have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here.
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