Friday, July 8, 2016

Heartfelt Thanks

(Written July 7, 2016)

Last week I completed a three-day protest fast that I addressed on June 27 on Facebook.  I am glad I fasted for a number of reasons, including the fact that the experience further strengthened my resolve to fight this witch hunt for as long as it takes.  One of the best things I did over the three day fast was to reread some of the grand jury transcripts; this experience provided me with the required motivation to complete the fast.  If a lack of cooperation on the part of the State of Rhode Island regarding legitimate Public Information Requests continues, I will go on another fast fairly soon.  My heartfelt thanks to so many friends who reached out to me to express support and concern.  Everything is fine.

A July 4 Tribute To An Old Friend Who Perished In Vietnam

(Written July 4, 2016)

I wrote a tribute to an old friend on my Medium page. I hope you enjoy it.

A Protest Fast

(Written June 27, 2016)

In spring 1981, I made good on a commitment to travel to Prague to conduct a series of basketball clinics. I had just retired as head basketball coach at Trinity College to spend a year with our autistic son, Danny, seeking ways to deal with our precious son's affliction. The Eastern Bloc invitation had been extended several years earlier by Czech basketball friends based on my Kingswood Oxford boys team winning the Prague Christmas Festival tournament back in 1976.
I took off from JFK in May of '81. The first stop on the journey was a two day layover in Dublin and Belfast to meet with Irish basketball officials on the state of the game in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland.
Much of the day in Dublin was spent touring sports facilities, which made clear to me that there was no gymnasium in the Republic of Ireland comparable to a US junior high school gymnasium. I told my new Irish friends that once I completed my time with Danny, I would help them address the facility issue. 10 years later, we opened the Irish National Basketball Arena in Dublin.
My Belfast visit was not spent looking at sports facilities; the British government had already taken good care of that matter. The day was spent discussing how we could use basketball as a means to bring Catholic and Protestant youth together.
Several years after that day long visit, I developed, through the Institute for International Sport, a program called Belfast United. Quite simply, Belfast United involved the Institute forming basketball and soccer teams in Northern Ireland made up of equal numbers of Protestant and Catholic youth. I would put Belfast United next to any Northern Ireland youth program in helping to foster the peace that was declared years later. The "chipping effect" was the phrase we developed as we moved the project forward.
Our work in Belfast included the Institute administering several Northern Ireland Scholar Athlete Games, a number of symposiums, and the funding of interns and exchange programs with the United States. I even had Pulitzer Prize winning poet, Galway Kinnell, whom we inducted into the International Scholar Athlete Hall of Fame, travel to Belfast with me to promote the notion of sport and the arts fostering peace.
My time in Northern Ireland also encompassed countless conversations with Catholics who, in varying degrees, expressed their outrage over what they rightly perceived to be the oppressive practices of the British government. While they were not wrong in their opinions, those of us who ran Belfast United made clear that they were wrong in thinking that violence was the solution.
During this long process, while I came to develop great empathy for the plight of Catholics, I also came to understand that I would never truly understand their rage, only they could do so.
Many of you are aware of the media ethics project I have undertaken in relationship to my case. The project involves every word written and reported on the case being carefully scrutinized by a distinguished group of individuals. Once the analysis has been completed, the matter will be turned over to a selected school of journalism for an objective verdict on the fairness or lack thereof of the reporting. One of many "stand out" issues is a reporter who actually questioned our accomplishments over more than two decades of work in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland.
Several weeks ago, my rage with the State of Rhode Island and the reptile element of the media brought me to a decision I would have never considered before this witch hunt was launched in late 2011 by a small group of misguided individuals, aka "Othello Fellows". I decided to engage in a series of protest fasts over what I allege to be the obstructionist tactics of the State of Rhode Island and University of Rhode Island regarding public information I have requested months ago. At present, I am not the least bit satisfied with the responses from either URI or the state regarding the dire need to produce information that goes right to the heart of my innocence. One demand the state is acutely aware of is the need to produce the written evaluations of the work of the Institute for International Sport, before each year of granting funds. Just as I would put Belfast United with any project in Northern Ireland in fostering peace, I will put our work at the Institute for International Sport next to any other organization which has received State of Rhode Island funds, dating back to our opening in a one-room office in 1986. Plain and simple, the evaluations need to be produced; they are a matter of public record.
As a consequence, I will begin a 3-day protest fast on Wednesday, June 29. If I do not receive satisfactory answers in the near future, I will begin another fast, and another fast, and then another fast.... Going forward, I will also employ other non-violent forms of civil disobedience.
I am grateful to those of you who reached out to me to express varying opinions and concern of what I recognize appears, on the surface, to be an extreme step. Be assured that I have taken proper medical precautions; be assured I know exactly what I am doing. I also want to make known that I have great admiration for my two attorneys. This was my idea, not theirs and I asked them to respect the deeply personal nature of this decision.
I believe it would difficult for even the most open-minded individual to fully understand my decision. But I am confident that when we put on the defense at trial, when the grand jury documentary is produced, when the media ethics report is issued, and when the media documentary is produced, these benchmarks will lend needed perspective, address troubling issues, including the extent of State of Rhode Island influence on media reporting, and provide clear answers based not on sensationalism but fact.
I assure you that I will never back off one inch on my innocence or my resolve to level the field.

Wednesday, June 8, 2016

2016 New England Basketball Hall of Fame Reunion to Be Held at Springfield College

I am pleased to share with you information about the forthcoming 2016 New England Basketball Hall of Fame Reunion. The two-day event will take place on August 5 and 6, 2016 at Springfield College.

Registration begins next week for what we are confident will be a magnificent gathering of people who love “Our Game.”  The NEBHOF was founded was founded by the Institute for International Sport in 2002, and its Induction Ceremonies have grown into one of if not the biggest sports dinners in America.

Full details about the reunion and the schedule of events can be found on the NEBHOF website. I look forward to seeing you there!

Sunday, June 5, 2016

Remarks from My Press Conference on June 2, 2016

On June 2, I held my first meeting with the media since the Providence Journal and Hartford Courant jointly broke theon February 5, 2012. Here are my remarks:

June 3, 2016
For Immediate Release

Dan Doyle Remarks at June 2nd Press Conference
(Mr. Doyle’s first meeting with the media since the Hartford Courant and the Providence Journal jointly broke the story of his case on February 5, 2012)

Good morning everyone. 

As succinctly as possible, I will provide some insight into this case and the status of the Institute for International Sport. 

The Institute opened in a one room-office on the URI campus on July 1, 1986.  I would not change one thing that we have done since the day we opened.  This includes the fact that, whenever money was needed, it was my family who provided the money. 

Let me begin by addressing the issue of evaluation.  Any organization that grants funds is obligated to conduct a careful review of how the funds were expended.  We have presented two detailed public information requests to the State of Rhode Island, including specific requests that relate to the overall evaluative practices of the State of Rhode Island, and which request any and all evaluations conducted by the State of Rhode Island on the work of the Institute for International Sport.  The requests address the importance of receiving complete answers to all questions raised, since these answers relate directly to my innocence and civil rights.  In the requests, public in nature, and in plain sight, we have specifically asked for such normal evaluative information as comparative analysis -- how did we stack up against other Rhode Island non-profits receiving state grants … surely, the evaluations must have included economic impact … how much funding did we and other non-profits bring into the State of Rhode Island from sources outside the State. 

Chip is now pursuing the answers and he, better than I, can best address appropriate legal recourse, should the answers not be forthcoming.  For my part, I will be taking another form of protest, perfectly legal, if it becomes apparent that these questions are not being answered in a proper manner. 

Status of the Institute for International Sport

The key for any start-up organization, which ours surely was in 1986, is to create assets… assets that encourage donors, corporate sponsors and the like to provide assistance to a vision.  I have been privileged to conceive all Institute for International Sport assets, including the World Scholar-Athlete Games, National Sportsmanship Day and my books; my books have served as a key calling card in opening doors and establishing critical relationships that have benefited the Institute immensely.

Since February, 2012, I have, as a matter of protest, refused to accept a salary, refused to request funding from any outside source, and I have paid all Institute bills out of my own pocket. 

A major focal point of my work since February 5, 2012, when this story broke, has been to create new assets for the Institute; assets that will ensure our future.  All of these assets are designed to create good… to address issues of societal importance.  The assets that I have developed since February 2012 include a play on the life of Shoeless Joe Jackson which addresses such matters as race and illiteracy and will be brought to college campuses; a CD of songs that I have recorded, and pre-production of documentaries, including a documentary on the Grand Jury System.  My reason for undertaking these projects relates to my awareness that creating a Scholar-Athlete Games Documentary and Music Division, which we have done, will open up many new avenues of positive impact.  I also realized that if we were to make this Division a serious part of our work, that I needed to learn, firsthand, how to do these things so that I could then properly advise our Scholar-Athletes and Scholar-Artists.

An Organization That Encourages Non-Violent Protest

My experience since February 2012 has caused me to determine that a centerpiece for the Institute and the Scholar-Athlete Games, going forward, will be to encourage our Scholar-Athletes and Scholar-Artists to engage in non-violent protests; and we will advise along the way.  We have a global alumni base that has waited for our call to action since closing ceremonies in 1993.  This case has delayed the issuing of that call.  But the first formal call to action is coming -- and will be issued at the forthcoming African Scholar-Athlete Games; a project that we initiated with a pilot program in Namibia in 2013 -- and will evolve into a full-scale event involving all 54 African countries.  Protest initiatives we will foster will include Scholar-Athletes and Scholar-Artists writing songs, producing documentaries, and writing plays and books and essays about various forms of injustice.  I can assure you that much good will come from these initiatives, as much good has come from the work we started in 1986.

Media Ethics

I have dealt with the media since I was a high school athlete. In a general sense, I have very high regard for the media – and great respect for the difficulty of the job.  One of our best events ever at the Institute was a Sports Media Ethics Symposium, chaired for us by Alex Wolff of Sports Illustrated and Sandy Padwe, at the time, acting dean of the Columbia School of Journalism.  As has been the case since our founding in 1986, this event, and every other Institute sponsored event, was made available to URI students, faculty and administrators at no charge.

It would be impossible for me to convey my outrage regarding the manner in which the media has reported on this case since February 5, 2012.  Rather than engage the media, I decided to create a media ethics project; a project in which every word and every report on this case, since February 2012, is being scrutinized and will be turned over eventually to a J school for objective analysis and conclusions regarding the fairness or lack thereof of the reporting.  The project includes relentless research on exactly who planted many of the stories that appeared.
 
I am convinced that while the report could turn out to be quite painful for certain members of the media, it will serve as an invaluable resource going forward.  One of the many issues that will be addressed in the report is why the media, in May 2013, 16 months after Gordon Fox called for an investigation and the indictments were finally issued… the process is the punishment as you may know… why the media failed to conduct a detailed investigation of the legitimacy, or lack thereof, of each indictment.  It is too late now.

I am deeply concerned that the information on the Internet may well deprive me of my right to a fair trial.  By Googling my name, you will see what I mean.
 
As a young teacher, I taught a class in which we used the New York Times as the textbook -- specifically, the Times op ed page.  I became a big fan of the late Anthony Lewis, particularly for his enlightened views on the First Amendment.  His book, Freedom from the Thought We Hate, is a classic which reflected his clear understanding of the amendments noble purpose.  I still read the New York Times Op Ed page every day and view David Brooks as a worthy successor to Mr. Lewis.  Never once have I read a Brooks Op Ed that I felt was rooted in inequity. 

I believe the Media Ethics Project will point to the real fact that no industry is in greater need for introspection than the media, and no amendment, with the possible exception of the fourth amendment, is more abused than the first amendment.

A Request

I would be grateful if members of the media would go back to the fall of 2011 and examine to what extent, if any, your reporting of this situation was influenced by outside forces.  I make this request respectfully, and add that if you do conclude that outside influence in any way compromised your objectivity that you take some form of action, in whatever way you feel appropriate. I think you will agree that no institution is inviolable, and I thank you for your consideration of this important request.

Patrick Kennedy

I will not discuss today anything of a specific nature regarding the trial, including witnesses and the like.  However, I do invite you to call Mr. Kennedy and ask him if he stands by the statement he made to the Hartford Courant… and ask who were the sources he used to make such a statement.

Turning Outrage into Positive Purpose

I have found that outrage carries with it great energy.  I have also found that if you work at it, you can turn the energy into positive purpose.  Good, I assure you, will come from this experience.

I can also assure you that I will not leave this planet until my name is cleared, as in completely cleared, and until the individuals behind this are held fully accountable within the law.

Thursday, May 26, 2016

Renowned Fulbright Scholar Joins My Grand Ole Jury Documentary Team

May 25, 2016
For Immediate Release

Fulbright Scholar Joins Doyle Grand Jury Documentary Project

Dr. Eileen M. Angelini, a renowned Fulbright Scholar with extensive experience in documentary research and production, has agreed to play a key role in the production of the documentary entitled The Gran' Ole Jury: No Judge Just A Rope.  The documentary is being produced by Dan Doyle and the Institute for International Sport, which Mr. Doyle founded in 1986.

Dr. Angelini, who holds a Ph.D. from Brown University, has a long history of work with Mr. Doyle and the Institute, having served as a teacher, group leader, and coach at several Scholar-Athlete Games.  Dr. Angelini's primary role in the documentary will center on research, development of the narrative, and, ultimately, translation.  Dr. Angelini is currently co-translating with Dr. Ruth Caldwell the French to English translation of Laurette Alexis-Monet’s Les Miradors de Vichy.  Drs. Angelini and Caldwell are also finalizing the English subtitles for the feature-length film Laurette 1942 by Francis Fourcou in preparation for U.S. screenings.

The Grand Jury documentary, which has generated widespread interest, will be a centerpiece of the Institute's newly created Documentary and Music Division. The new division links directly with the Institute’s Scholar-Athlete Games program and other Institute initiatives.
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For further information, contact info@internationalsport.org