The Virginian-Pilot
                             THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT 
              Copyright (c) 1996, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: Wednesday, January 3, 1996             TAG: 9601030543
SECTION: SPORTS                   PAGE: C1   EDITION: FINAL 
SOURCE: BY BETTY HAYDEN AND JAN VERTEFEUILLE, LANDMARK NEWS SERVICE 
                                             LENGTH: Medium:   86 lines

WOMAN FILES CIVIL SUIT VS. MORRISON, TECH

As the Virginia Tech Hokies rode post-season Sugar Bowl euphoria on Tuesday, a federal judge unsealed a former student's civil lawsuit against the school and two players she says raped her.

The former student, Christy Brzonkala, is seeking $8.3 million - the amount Tech received for playing in the New Year's Eve game.

Brzonkala says linebacker Tony Morrison and his roommate, James Crawford, raped her in their dorm room in September 1994. Dissatisfied with the university's handling of the case, she wants another chance to make her case - in a federal civil trial.

Her attorney sees the suit as a test case under the Violence Against Women Act of 1994, enacted just a week before the alleged rapes. In a nod to the Hokies' preoccupation with its bowl victory, she picked their payout as the amount she is asking in punitive damages.

Morrison, from Chesapeake's Indian River High, initially was found guilty of sexual assault in a campus hearing last spring and suspended for two semesters. But after two appeals, he was found guilty only of using abusive language and allowed to return to school.

This is the first time Crawford, who had no action taken against him by a campus judicial board, has been publicly identified.

Neither player has been criminally charged, and neither could be reached for comment Tuesday.

Both were suspended from the football team before the Sugar Bowl after being charged with unrelated crimes off campus.

Brzonkala alleges in her suit that Morrison raped her twice and Crawford raped her once at the beginning of her freshman year.

The 19-year-old Fairfax County resident decided to go public in late November - 14 months after the alleged assaults.

``I see how many women don't come forward,'' she said from her home Tuesday evening. ``I want to make it easier for women to come forward.''

The university released a brief statement Tuesday, the day the suit was unsealed. It was filed Dec. 27 and sealed until all parties could be served, at Brzonkala's request. But Morrison and Crawford have not been served yet.

``We believe the facts of the case, once fully presented, will support the university's position,'' said university spokesman Larry Hincker.

Brzonkala is asking a judge to issue an injunction forbidding Virginia Tech from internally prosecuting felony sexual assault cases in the future.

Although the suit is a civil suit, Brzonkala also wants the judge to uphold the Tech judiciary board's initial finding that Morrison was guilty of sexual assault. She said it's important to her ``healing'' and peace of mind to be vindicated.

As part of her damage claim against the school, Brzonkala says she was forced to withdraw from Tech because officials ``had publicly repudiated her claim that Morrison had raped her (and she) feared for her personal safety.''

She said she did not pursue criminal charges against the pair because she relied on Tech's internal sexual assault policy. She said she had to learn that Morrison would be allowed to return to school in a newspaper article.

She is seeking $4 million from the school, as well as damages for loss of education, expenses, medical and psychological treatment, humiliation and embarrassment, and another $4.3 million from Morrison and Crawford.

The suit also seeks damages from ``unidentified co-conspirators who will be named in this suit as discovery reveals their identities.''

Brzonkala said she attempted suicide a few weeks after the incident and has suffered ``severe emotional distress'' and continuing physical injuries.

The suit said she recognized the two as her assailants in March 1995, six months after the incident, and filed a complaint against them under the school's sexual assault policy the following month.

The suit says Morrison admitted having sex with Brzonkala, but insisted that it was consensual, even though he ``admitted that (she) told him `no' twice.'' Crawford denied having any sexual contact with her.

All-American defensive end Cornell Brown is accused in Brzonkala's lawsuit of helping Crawford avoid sanctions by providing him an alibi before the judicial board hearing.

Morrison and Crawford both were suspended from the football team in the weeks before the Sugar Bowl, actions the school has said were for unrelated reasons. Football coach Frank Beamer suspended Morrison indefinitely three weeks ago following the player's early morning arrest Dec. 9 by Blacksburg police on charges of with petty larceny, destruction of private property and public intoxication.

Crawford was suspended after being arrested in a separate incident.

KEYWORDS: CIVIL LAWSUIT RAPE VIRGINIA TECH by CNB