• The VOIDRUNNER'S CODEX is coming! Explore new worlds, fight oppressive empires, fend off fearsome aliens, and wield deadly psionics with this comprehensive boxed set expansion for 5E and A5E!

Harassment Policies: New Allegations Show More Work To Be Done

The specter of sexual harassment has once again risen up in tabletop gaming circles. Conventions are supposed to be places where gamers and geeks can be themselves and embrace their loves. Conventions need clear and well formulated harassment policies, and they need to enforce them. In this instance the allegations from multiple women have taken place at gaming conventions and gathering in different locations around the country. In one case, the harassment was took place over the course of years and spilled over into electronic formats.

Status
Not open for further replies.
The specter of sexual harassment has once again risen up in tabletop gaming circles. Conventions are supposed to be places where gamers and geeks can be themselves and embrace their loves. Conventions need clear and well formulated harassment policies, and they need to enforce them. In this instance the allegations from multiple women have taken place at gaming conventions and gathering in different locations around the country. In one case, the harassment was took place over the course of years and spilled over into electronic formats.


The alleged harasser in these cases was Sean Patrick Fannon, President of Evil Beagle Games, Brand Manager for Savage Rifts at Pinnacle Entertainment Group, as well as being a game designer and developer with a long history in the tabletop role-playing industry.

There is a long and untenable policy of harassment at conventions that stretches back to science fiction and fantasy fandom in the 1960s. Atlanta's Dragon*Con has been a lightning rod in the discussions about safety at geeky conventions after one of the convention's founders was arrested and pled guilty to three charges of molestation. We have also covered reports of harassment at conventions such as Paizo Con, and inappropriate or harassing behavior by notable industry figures. It is clear that clear harassment policies and firm enforcement of them is needed in spaces where members of our community gather, in order that attendees feel safe to go about their hobby. Some companies, such as Pelgrane Press, now refuse to attend conventions where a clear harassment policy is not available.

Several women have approached me to tell me about encounters with Fannon. Some of them asked not to be named, or to use their reports for background verification only. We also reached out to Sean Patrick Fannon for his comments, and he was willing to address the allegations.

The women that I spoke with had encounters with Fannon that went back to 2013 and 2014 but also happened as recently as the summer of 2017. Each of the locations were in different parts of the country, but all of them occurred when Fannon was a guest of the event.

The worse of the two incidents related to me happened at a convention in the Eastern part of the United States. In going back over texts and messages stretching back years the woman said that it "is frustrating [now] to read these things" because of the cajoling and almost bullying approach that Fannon would use in the messages. She said that Fannon approached her at the con suite of the convention, and after speaking with her for a bit and playing a game with a group in the suite he showed her explicit photos on his cellphone of him engaged in sex acts with a woman.

Fannon's ongoing harassment of this woman would occur both electronically and in person, when they would both be at the same event, and over the course of years he would continue to suggest that she should engage in sexual acts, either with him alone, or with another woman.

Fannon denies the nature of the event, saying "I will assert with confidence that at no time would such a sharing have occurred without my understanding explicit consent on the part of all parties. It may be that, somehow, a miscommunication or misunderstanding occurred; the chaos of a party or social gathering may have created a circumstance of all parties not understanding the same thing within such a discourse. Regardless, I would not have opened such a file and shared it without believing, sincerely, it was a welcome part of the discussion (and in pursuit of further, mutually-expressed intimate interest)."

The second woman, at a different gaming-related event in another part of the country, told of how Fannon, over the course of a day at the event, asked her on four different occasions for hugs, or physical contact with her. Each time she clearly said no to him. The first time she qualified her answer with a "I don't even know you," which prompted Fannon after he saw her for a second time to say "Well, you know me now." She said that because of the multiple attempts in a short period of time that Fannon's behavior felt predatory to her. Afterwards he also attempted to connect with her via Facebook.

Afterwards, this second woman contacted the group that organized the event to share what happened and they reached out to Fannon with their concerns towards his behavior. According to sources within the organization at the time, Fannon - as with the first example - described it to the organizers as a misunderstanding on the woman's part. When asked, he later clarified to us that the misunderstanding was on his own side, saying "Honestly, I should have gotten over myself right at the start, simply owned that I misunderstood, and apologized. In the end, that's what happened, and I walked away from that with a pretty profound sense of how to go forward with my thinking about the personal space of those I don't know or know only in passing."

Both women faced ongoing pressure from Fannon, with one woman the experiences going on for a number of years after the initial convention meeting. In both cases he attempted to continue contact via electronic means with varying degrees of success. A number of screen shots from electronic conversations with Fannon were shared with me by both women.

Diane Bulkeley was willing to come forward and speak on the record of her incidents with Fannon. Fannon made seemingly innocent, and yet inappropriate comments about her body and what he wanted to do with her. She is part of a charity organization that had Fannon as a guest. What happened to her was witnessed by another woman with whom I spoke about that weekend. As Bulkeley heard some things, and her witness others, their experiences are interwoven to describe what happened. Bulkeley described this first encounter at the hotel's elevators: "We were on the floor where our rooms were to go downstairs to the convention floor. I was wearing a tank top and shirt over it that showed my cleavage. He was staring at my chest and said how much he loved my shirt and that I should wear it more often as it makes him hot. For the record I can't help my cleavage is there." Bulkeley went on to describe her mental state towards this "Paying a lady a compliment is one thing, but when you make a direct comment about their chest we have a problem."

Later on in the same day, while unloading some boxes for the convention there was another incident with Fannon. Bulkeley described this: "Well, [the witness and her husband] had to move their stuff from a friends airplane hangar (we all use as storage for cars and stuff) to a storage until next to their house. Apparently Sean, while at the hanger, made grunt noises about my tank top (it was 80 outside) while Tammy was in the truck. I did not see it. But she told me about it. Then as we were unloading the truck at the new facility Sean kept looking down my shirt and saying I have a great view etc. Her husband said to him to knock it off. I rolled my eyes, gave him a glare and continued to work. I did go and put on my event day jacket (light weight jacket) to cover up a little."

The witness, who was in the truck with Fannon, said that he "kept leering down at Diane, glancing down her shirt and making suggestive sounds." The witness said that Fannon commented "'I'm liking the view from up here.'"

Bulkeley talked about how Fannon continued his behavior later on in a restaurant, having dinner with some of the guests of the event. Fannon made inappropriate comments about her body and embarrassed her in front of the other, making her feel uncomfortable throughout the dinner.

Bulkeley said that Fannon also at one point touched her hair without asking, and smelled it as well. "[Fannon] even would smell my long hair. He begged me to not cut it off at a charity function that was part of the weekend's event." She said that he also pressed his pelvis tightly against her body while hugging her. These incidents occurred at a convention during the summer of 2017.

Fannon denies these events. "The comments and actions attributed to me simply did not happen; I categorically and absolutely deny them in their entirety."

When asked for comment, and being informed that this story was being compiled Fannon commented "I do not recall any such circumstance in which the aftermath included a discourse whereby I was informed of distress, anger, or discomfort." He went on to say "The only time I recall having ever been counseled or otherwise spoken to about my behavior in such matters is the Gamers Giving/Total Escape Games situation discussed above. The leader of the organization at that time spoke to me specifically, asked me to be aware that it had been an issue, and requested I be aware of it in the future. It was then formally dropped, and that was the end of it until this time."

There were further reports; however, we have respected the wishes of those women who asked to remain anonymous for fear of online harassment. In researching this article, I talked to multiple women and other witnesses.

About future actions against the alleged behaviors he also said "It is easy, after all, to directly attack and excise obviously predatory and harassing behavior. It is much more difficult to point out and correct behavior that falls within more subtle presentations, and it's more difficult to get folks to see their actions as harmful when they had no intention to cause harm, based on their assumptions of what is and isn't appropriate. It's good for us to look at the core assumptions that lead to those behaviors and continue to challenge them. That's how real and lasting change within society is achieved."

Fannon's weekly column will no longer be running on E.N. World.

Have you suffered harassment at the hands of someone, industry insider or otherwise, at a gaming convention? If you would like to tell your story, you can reach out to me via social media about any alleged incidents. We can speak confidentially, but I will have to know the identity of anyone that I speak with.

This does open up the question of: At what point do conventions become responsible for the actions of their guest, when they are not more closely scrutinizing the backgrounds of those guests? One woman, who is a convention organizer, with whom I spoke for the background of this story told me that word gets around, in the world of comic conventions, when guests and creators cause problems. Apparently this is not yet the case in the world of tabletop role-playing game conventions, because there are a growing number of publishers and designers who have been outed for various types of harassing behavior, but are still being invited to be guest, and in some cases even guests of honor, at gaming conventions around the country. The message that this sends to women who game is pretty clear.

More conventions are rolling out harassment policies for guests and attendees of their conventions. Not only does this help to protect attendees from bad behavior, but it can also help to protect conventions from bad actors within the various communities that gather at our conventions. As incidents of physical and sexual harassment are becoming more visible, it becomes more and more clear that something needs to be done.

additional editorial contributions by Morrus
 

log in or register to remove this ad

Jeanneliza

First Post
I know this post seems to be a big flashing don’t feed the bears/trolls sign but even with his several faults I love Animal Farm and 1984.

Orwell predicted replacing the power of men and replacing them with a powerless castrati in 1984, this is what you are actually claiming?

Three points/questions?

1. What does this have to do with anything in this thread?

2. I’ve never heard castrati before but I’m pretty sure what it means and I’m not going to waste time googling it. You think that’s a good subject to bring up in this thread. A thread that is really about men taking some responsibility and for the first time in well pretty much ever not treating women like they were there property to do with as they please, and more importantly asking women and men how do we make conventions safer for women going forward?


3. Off topic I know but 1984 was about the horrors of totalitarianism, how an authoritarian government could strip personal rights and freedoms from its citizens, and the dangers of propaganda, nothing about stealing power from men, I mean really I'm no angel and I did and said things in my youth I am sorry for but really 1984 now a book about empowering men. Next I'll learn that Dr. Strangelove is actually about preserving our precious bodily fluids and not satire.

You know I caught that, and I have heard of the castrati. The Vienna Boys Choir was originally made up of castrati, boys castrated to prevent their voices from changing, not to prevent rape. And it was done by the CATHOLIC CHURCH the bastion of male domination. If he was upset over the castrati he should be angry with men.
 

log in or register to remove this ad

Morrus

Well, that was fun
Staff member
This is fueled by a leftist agenda to destroy the power of men in our society, and replace them with powerless castrati who have no role in society as husbands and fathers. George Orwell predicted this in 1984, I invite you to read the book to understand where all this is going.

Boy, did you pick the wrong website to rant about "leftist agendas". Don't post in this thread again, please.
 

Advilaar

Explorer
You are right why don't you have women dress in burkas that will just solve everything.

No. Be careful with implying or assuming. It may earn points with some, but makes you appear like a zealot.

The conventions are a trade convention. A vacation destination as well.

If there are huge public outcries and bad media about harassment (whether this is ubiquitous or overblown - matters not), they will shut down the drinking and room parties. They will also shut down the cosplay - at least the very racy outfits. While they do care somewhat about social justice stuff, they also do not want the headache of lawsuits, drunks, enforcement.

This has nothing to do with equality, diversity, radical feminism, sexual predators, NLP stupidity, Red Pill, MGTOW, gamergate, MeToo, or any of the internet religions out there. And, yes, these things ARE religions. Do not believe me? Try to disagree even slightly with one of those groups - even rationally. Watch the bans and dog piles.

They DO care about
- The money
- The vendors and products that buy booths to bring the money
- Avoiding lawsuits and not tinkling off the hotel or other stakeholders.
- People having fun and returning.

Anything that interferes with this, they will squish.

Fortunately, they are going to do what they have been doing. Put in BIG ALL CAPS that no means no along with the other stuff like no stealing, no destroying the facility, etc. Any one doing those things that gets caught gets tossed out. AND - if you see the article, if it is bad enough you get your occupation crushed. Seems like the system is working.

Other than shutting high risk events down that are a headache to them anyways, I am not sure what else MORE people really want these organizations to do. Forms in triplicate? Ban all hetero dudes? (Don't laugh. There are a very few who would be okay with that even though it would be a death knell for any existing convention) FBI fingerprint checks to run a game?

I would sincerely hope people are not bringing tin foil hat into this or absolute statements. This includes stuff like "all men are harassers" to stuff like "You will be falsely accused and be made homeless because you were rejected" and other misanthropic nonsense. There will always be harassers, there will always be people who lie vindictively. But if you center your life around this, you are in for a very unhappy life. I prefer to avoid those people.

I have stated my position, and this article is on second page now. I am going to go on towards other things other than media clickbait. Like converting some 2e Gamma World to 5e. Something geeky. Wasn't that supposed to be the thing?
 

Morrus

Well, that was fun
Staff member
Probably didn't help when left wing activists started deriding posters if they didn't fall in line, and the mods (predictably) didn't censor any of them. But post an acronym used commonly for left wing activists and they'll ban you in less than a page...

You know better than to challenge moderation in-thread. Don't post in this thread again, please.
 

S'mon

Legend
Re the OP, and I do take eg Elf Witch's points seriously...

One thing I noticed about the Gencon policy is that it does not give a definition of harassment. Legal definitions typically involve repeated inappropriate behaviour, so following someone around oggling them could well count - and if asked to desist certainly would count IMO. An undesired sexual comment usually does not meet legal definitions of harassment.

Would it be beneficial for Convention policies to give at least an indicative idea of what constitutes harassment?

There are some behaviours that the perpetrator clearly knows are not welcome or appropriate, and these perpetrators are not going to be deterred by any code. But there is a lot of marginal activity too (such as some of what SPF is accused of) that may be appropriate in some contexts but not in others. And social mores change too, behaviour typical in 1978 may be seen as reprehensible in 2018.

Would an indicative list of behaviour considered inappropriate be helpful to deter the marginal cases? On the evidence given, I don't believe SPF considered his behaviour to amount to harassment, and if you want it stopped then giving examples of undesired behaviour could be helpful and perhaps create greater certainty.
 

S'mon

Legend
My suggestion would be to make it personal. Yes have it posted as you walk in the door and at many different points in the venue but hire a few more people, (charge $5 a person more to do this if you have to) to explain to everyone as they register what the policy is, and more importantly why the convention thinks it is important.

Make it personal; have a person sitting their letting every convention attendee know that you are expected to treat everyone there with equal respect and what to do if someone isn’t treating you with respect.

There are a lot of questions on this thread I don’t have good answers too, but the one thing I do know from working several decades in customer service is a billboard and a poster while nice are nothing compared with another human being asking you face to face to respect everyone in the hall.

This fits my experience - telling people to treat each other with mutual respect works well, and is a fairly easy metric to apply in evaluating if there's been a breach. It's a lot like the Kantian injunction to treat each other as ends not means. I would support its inclusion in a behaviour code.
 

Riley37

First Post
And to think that 10 pages back or so some folks thought I was reading too much into Cali's comments about "absentee fathers" and "smacking kids upside the head" when I said it sounded like he was just defending the patriarchy.

I hereby nominate you for the Ian Malcolm Award for Accurate Alarmism. Sometimes being right is cold consolation.

Sadras will *still* call you an alarmist.

I mentioned a distant relative, who was executed by the Third Reich; Sadras apparently thinks that he, too, was alarmist; that the historical event in which he died, doesn't count as a reason to *actively* practice "never forget, never again".

If he *had* been an alarmist, maybe he would have lived longer; and what happened to his wife, after his death, might not have happened. I don't think even Sadras would make fun of her fate... but there's a guy posting fast and furious, who might go there.
 

Sadras

Legend
Re the OP, and I do take eg Elf Witch's points seriously...

One thing I noticed about the Gencon policy is that it does not give a definition of harassment. Legal definitions typically involve repeated inappropriate behaviour, so following someone around oggling them could well count - and if asked to desist certainly would count IMO. An undesired sexual comment usually does not meet legal definitions of harassment.

Would it be beneficial for Convention policies to give at least an indicative idea of what constitutes harassment?

There are some behaviours that the perpetrator clearly knows are not welcome or appropriate, and these perpetrators are not going to be deterred by any code. But there is a lot of marginal activity too (such as some of what SPF is accused of) that may be appropriate in some contexts but not in others. And social mores change too, behaviour typical in 1978 may be seen as reprehensible in 2018.

Would an indicative list of behaviour considered inappropriate be helpful to deter the marginal cases? On the evidence given, I don't believe SPF considered his behaviour to amount to harassment, and if you want it stopped then giving examples of undesired behaviour could be helpful and perhaps create greater certainty.

I honestly find this baffling that we need examples of what constitutes harassment.
Showing naked pics of yourself to the opposite sex when there is no indication of this being welcome; or
Repeatedly making a woman feel uncomfortable while you sexualise her by ogling at her even after being asked to stop. I do not believe SPF didn't know, in that moment, that what he was doing was just plain wrong.

Have men really forgotten how to flirt without the risk of making women feel uncomfortable or worse? Are male gamers so bad at their Insight checks they do not know when to draw the line so they need some guide for do's and don'ts?
 
Last edited by a moderator:

S'mon

Legend
Have men really forgotten how to flirt with the risk of making women feel uncomfortable or worse? Are male gamers so bad at their Insight checks they do not know when to draw the line so they need some guide for do's and don'ts?

Yes? I'm sure most convention goers are fine. But as I said, I think there may well be a minority of socially maladroit people for whom a clear policy would make a difference.
 


Status
Not open for further replies.

Related Articles

Remove ads

Remove ads

Top