NEW ORLEANS -- An Alabama man pleaded guilty Tuesday to obscenity
charges and faces a two-year prison sentence for rubbing his genitals on
an unconscious LSU fan in a Bourbon Street restaurant after the BCS
national title game in January.
Prosecutors reached a plea deal
with Brian H. Downing of Smith Station, Ala., on the morning he was
scheduled to be tried on charges that included sexual battery, which is
punishable by up to 10 years in prison. Prosecutors agreed to drop the
battery charge.
Downing is scheduled to be formally sentenced on
Nov. 29, but Orleans Parish Criminal District Judge Karen Herman
indicated she will sentence Downing to two years in prison and recommend
his participation in a boot camp program run by prison officials.
Downing will not be required to register as a sex offender.
A
video that went viral on the Internet appeared to show someone in a
University of Alabama jacket exposing his genitals and performing a
simulated sex act on the unconscious man at the restaurant after the
Crimson Tide beat LSU for the BCS football championship on Jan. 9.
The
LSU fan has sued Downing, asking damages for "mental anguish,
humiliation, embarrassment, anxiety and depression ... damage to
reputation" and lost tuition payments "for having to withdraw from
school."
Christopher Bowman, spokesman for District Attorney Leon
Cannizzaro, said prosecutors consulted with the victim before agreeing
on the plea deal. He described it as the "most just outcome and also the
most certain outcome." He rejected the notion that Downing's actions
were merely a drunken prank.
"When you put your genitals on
someone's body, someone who is passed out, that's not a prank," he said.
"I don't think people would be asking that question if the defendant
had done it to a passed-out woman."
Michael Kennedy, one of
Downing's attorneys, said his client decided to accept the deal in large
part because he has a 1-year-old son and didn't want to have to
register as a sex offender.
"Is it worth the risk of never seeing a
Little League game? Of never being able to drop your child off at
school? He decided no," Kennedy said.
Although Downing will be
sentenced to two years, he may be eligible to serve less than half of
that. Kennedy estimated his client will serve a minimum of nine months.
Downing didn't answer a reporter's questions after the brief hearing.
New
Orleans police at first said they could only investigate the case if
the fan filed a complaint, then sent out a wanted poster with
screenshots from the video. Downing, a cousin of Russell County, Ala.,
Sheriff Heath Taylor, turned himself in.
Taylor said in January
that after learning from other family members that Downing had been
identified as the Alabama fan, he called Downing's father and told him
to bring him to the sheriff's office in Phenix City, Ala. He said he
then called New Orleans police to ask whether they wanted him to jail
and extradite Downing or send him to New Orleans to surrender.
Associated Press