The Arizona Coyotes said on Thursday that they had renounced the rights to their top pick in this year's NHL draft after a published report described the player's 2016 conviction in a juvenile-court case related to bullying of a Black classmate who has a developmental disability.
On Friday morning, the president of the University of North Dakota announced that Mitchell Miller, a freshman at the school, was no longer on the school's hockey team.
"We expect our students to live by our values in the classroom, in the community and when representing the university on the field of play," wrote UND president Andrew Armacost, adding that Miller can remain as a student at the school in Grand Forks,
The Coyotes knew about the abusive history when they chose Miller, an 18-year-old defenseman, in the fourth round, 111th over all, this month. According to the report in The Arizona Republic, Miller, who is now a free agent, provided all 31 NHL teams with a letter before the draft, saying he regretted what he had done and providing character references.
The Arizona newspaper's story reported that, in 2016, "Miller admitted in an Ohio juvenile court to bullying [Isaiah] Meyer-Crothers, who was tricked into licking a candy push pop that Miller and another boy had wiped in a bathroom urinal. Meyer-Crothers had to be tested for hepatitis, HIV and STDs, but the tests came back negative, according to a police report."
The revelation and the Coyotes' decision followed a season in which the NHL, a mostly white league, was forced to confront several acts of bigotry.
"In junior high, I got beat up by him," Miller's victim, Isaiah Meyer-Crothers, told The Republic. "Everyone thinks he's so cool that he gets to go to the NHL, but I don't see how someone can be cool when you pick on someone and bully someone your entire life."
Miller and Meyer-Crothers knew each other growing up in Sylvania, Ohio, a suburb of Toledo along the state's border with Michigan. The Republic said that a police report on the abuse stated that Miller, who was 14 at the time, and another student had forced Meyer-Crothers to eat candy that had been wiped in a bathroom urinal. The Republic said that, according to the police report, Meyer-Crothers had to be tested for hepatitis, HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases, but the tests came back negative.