Assistant coach to prospective Black players: “Do you like White women? Because we have a lot of them at Baylor and they love football players.” The death penalty should not be out of line for rapists and defilers of our women. Organized athletics in this country are utterly corrupted, and all White people should cease supporting them immediately.

A BAYLOR UNIVERSITY GRADUATE who says she was raped by football players in 2013 sued the university Friday. Her lawsuit includes an allegation that 31 Baylor football players committed 52 acts of rape, including five gang rapes, between 2011 and 2014 — an estimate that far exceeds the number previously provided by school officials.

The woman, identified in the suit as Elizabeth Doe, reports being brutally gang raped by then-Baylor football players Tre’Von Armstead and Shamycheal Chatman after a party on April 18, 2013.

Those football players were previously named as suspects in a police report for a rape on that date, but were never charged.

The woman, who graduated from Baylor in 2014, has sued Baylor for Title IX violations and negligence.

A Baylor spokeswoman declined to comment Friday.

John Clune, the Colorado attorney who represents the woman, released a statement Friday saying that his team appreciates what Baylor has done to try to fix the sexual assault problem on campus. But, he said, “this is one that needed to be filed.”

“As hard as the events at Baylor have been for people to hear, what went on there was much worse than has been reported,” he said.

One of the woman’s alleged attackers — Chatman — was accused of rape once before, the suits says, but the university failed to intervene. In that case, the suit says, a student athletic trainer reported that Chatman raped her at his off-campus apartment, so the university moved the trainer to a female sports team and agreed to pay for her education in exchange for a non-disclosure agreement.

The lawsuit describes a culture of sexual violence under former Baylor football coach Art Briles, in which the school implemented a “show ’em a good time” policy that “used sex to sell” the football program to recruits.

Former assistant coach Kendal Briles — the son of the head coach — once told a Dallas area student athlete, “Do you like white women? Because we have a lot of them at Baylor and they love football players,” according to the suit.

Investigation by lawyers identified at least 52 “acts of rape,” including five gang rapes, by 31 football players from 2011 to 2014. At least two of the gang rapes were committed by 10 or more players at one time, the suit states.

This contrasts with figures Baylor officials have provided after the Pennsylvania-based law firm Pepper Hamilton conducted an investigation into how the university handled sexual assault. Regents told The Wall Street Journal in October that they were aware of 17 women who reported sexual or domestic assaults involving 19 players, including four alleged gang rapes, since 2011.

Tonya Lewis, the Baylor spokeswoman, declined to respond to specific questions about Baylor’s knowledge of the prior sexual assault alleged in the suit, the scope of the Pepper Hamilton investigation or whether the university stands by the numbers it originally provided.