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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.

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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
 

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Hussar

Legend
Yeah, thankfully the message is "witch hunts shouldn't destroy people's careers" it seems, which is a pretty good one on the whole. Convention organizers are under no impetus, nor should they be, to conduct background checks that transcend beyond the legal sphere into the realm of rumors and maybes. Likewise, a convention is not responsible for the actions of those attending it, invitees or otherwise, unless they miss-step while conducting business on the convention's behalf. If a speaker they invite goes and drives under the influence after his/her time-slot, it's not on the convention to screen further speakers for a history of drunkenness.

But, again, that's not what's being talked about. We're talking about behavior that occurred AT conventions. So, just because he didn't drive drunk while he DM'd a game, doesn't mean that he might not suffer any repercussions for driving home drunk every night after the convention. After all, there's a REASON that many Con's have a drunk bus and a hotel reservation close to the con. (I'm talking about smaller con's of course here, but, even larger con's generally have hotels nearby and means for getting there)

So, yeah, it's absolutely the responsibility of a Con organizer to recognize issues. If someone is a convicted sex offender, then perhaps not inviting that person to speak at your all ages convention is a good idea. If someone has a history of harassment, drunkenness or otherwise poor behavior, then absolutely that should impact whether you get invited to the con.


Two things on this note:

1) Have these actually done anything? As in, is there any data to support the assertion that all of these policies actually deter predatory behavior, or is it a bunch of legalese to make people feel like change is happening when it isn't? I suspect the latter, especially when the very subject of this article asserts many of the incidents were supposedly errors of miscommunication, which the subject would not have registered as harassment in the first place. I likewise believe that these incidents would have taken place regardless of any language put forth to attendants prior.

However, the raised awareness does impact behavior. There's a very good reason we have amended our language in recent years.

2) Visibility doesn't mean jack, and this is why your article (and those like it) are a crock. High visibility of misdeeds/crimes does NOT imply that there is an epidemic of them occurring, any more than a high profile murder would lead you to believe that America is getting more dangerous, when the opposite has been true for some time. You can say that "something needs to be done" when you can conclusively show that gaming conventions have a consistently higher rate of harassment than other social events of similar scale. Until such time as that data is provided then there is no indication that this hobby at large is any more or less healthy/safe than any other large gathering.

This one I don't understand. Why would con's need to have a higher rate of harassment for us to do anything?

Doesn't the fact that there is harassment going on, and it wasn't being addressed in the past make it enough for us to step up and start doing something?
 

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Hussar

Legend
It has been suggested that I need to "collect my friends" in this thread - specifically, those individuals who have chosen to take my "cause" and use it to advance misogynistic ideas, victim-blaming tactics, MRA agendas, and worse.

Allow me to be intensely clear about this - they are NOT my friends, they in no way speak for me, and I find all such statements reprehensible and unworthy.

If you believe you need to push an agenda that vilifies women for stepping forward to report bad actors, do NOT do so in my defense.

If you believe you need to advance anything that looks like "Not All Men," leave me out of it. We are not friends.

Peace.

Aww, damn. I didn't realize this was a sock puppet poster but thought this was Mr. Fannon himself. Since he doesn't need a "1" after his name and a new nick, I should not have posrepped this.
 

billd91

Not your screen monkey (he/him) 🇺🇦🇵🇸🏳️‍⚧️
You can undo XP, you just gotta wait 5 minutes.
 

Eltab

Lord of the Hidden Layer
If gender truly has no bearing, then it should also have no bearing on the inherent need to take precautions against assault or false allegations. ... then the opposite gender should also be bending over backwards to avoid any appearance of harassing behavior.
You mean like Rev. Billy Graham and VP Mike Pence have been known to do (never alone with a woman not their wife)? They were right to be cautious and dignified about it, but got ripped in the popular press for being "old-fashioned" and maybe a little crazy.

Jeanneliza said:
Easiest way to do that by the way is never harass anyone.
This is most certainly true.

You have hinted at the real solution a few times: bring up boys to become young men who understand the standards of Gentlemanly conduct. And girls to become Ladies.
For the ones who are already grown up, social pressure to become more gentlemanly.
 
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Sebastrd

Explorer
I have been following this thread since it started, and there are so many issues I could address here as a woman, as a grandmother who games, and just as a decent human being but that would take a book.
I do want to state one thing to all you legal experts, or those who think rules lawyering in a game qualifies you to act as either defense or prosecution here, libel laws. The entity is in the USA so it falls under US libel laws. Proving libel is a pretty high bar, and there are several legal protections publications take in advance.
First the article clearly states that ENWorld and Mr. Helton are in possession of physical evidence, texts, emails etc that support the claims. Should they be sued for slander the courtroom is the proper place to produce that.
Second, they clearly gave Mr. Fannon an opportunity to make a statement on his own behalf, and he clearly did. And HIS statement is riddled with admissions of bad behavior in the past and at least one occasion where it was reported to Con organizers. This itself lends credibility to the claims and pretty much ends any potential for a libel suit.
Third, people have commented on here who know him personally, and they too make enough admissions to again, preclude any potential libel suit.
Fourth, this paranoid BS about jail. NO ONE is talking about sending Mr. Fannon to jail, nor could they. These are civil offense at the level reported. If he physically grabbed someone that crosses a line to simple assault, then it becomes potentially criminal, but no one has said any of these women want to take it to that level.
For a libel suit to prevail Mr. Fannon would have to prove these women are lying. His accusations about their motives are ALSO libelous, and his credibility with his own admitted pattern will be far more scrutinized in a lawsuit than the multiple accusers.
Now to the issue of free speech. There are four recognized exceptions under US law and one of them are private venues. ENWorld is a private venue under the law, i.e. not government owned. How they choose to limit or not limit speech here is a private business decision. You can boycott them if you disagree, this is a time honored form of free speech, but complaining about legal violations then demonstrating a lack of understanding of the applicable laws is just WRONG.
There is another line running through this thread I wish I had time to address, and that is a pervasive fear, or claimed fear of even talking to women because of the risk of being attacked with harassment allegations. Welcome to our world boys. I am over 60 and I don't remember a time when my gender was not routinely advised on what to say or not to say so not as to give a guy the wrong impression. There has never been a time we were not advised about where we could go safely and where the risks were higher due to the potential for assault. There was never a time when we were not encouraged to stay in groups for our own physical safety. You all know that joke about women always needing two to go the restroom? Too us it was never a joke, it was merely following the advice of protecting ourselves from harassment and assault by sticking together. Any of you guys here ever been on an elevator alone, it stops on a different floor, door opens, a woman standing there, indicates she isn't getting in, no reason or a casual'wrong way" and shrug? Because we are taught to NEVER get in an elevator alone with strange men. period. Those are just two examples of how my gender is inculcated from our first steps to protect ourselves.
Do we ignore those rules at time? Sure, and when we do and then are actually attacked and we do report it do you know the questions we have to answer? WHY were you there alone? DID YOU say anything or act in anyway to encourage the attack? Were there any witnesses because unless they leave DNA and the attacker denies it is he said/she said. The news is loaded with TRUE stories nearly daily of a woman testifying against an assailant being put on trial to prove that she in NO WAY, word, thought, or deed invited this on herself.
So now that guys may have to do the same or be treated the same we have all this outrage.
As for PC, as I said I am a grandmother, I grew up in different times, and it seems to me this resentment of PC(or in my days was simply called good manners) is pretty misplaced. But I hear ya guys, I do miss the days when an elbow to the solar plexus or a knee to the groin of some overly friendly didn't carry the risk of an assault and battery charge.

Thank you for posting that. You rock.
 

Michael Barnes

First Post
The article is poorly written, but let's just unpack this really quick. There are three women that say they were harassed by Fannon

2013: A woman claims that he showed her explicit photos of himself and another woman, this apparently went on for years, the woman apparently never told him to stop.. Fannon claims it was consensual. She remains anonymous.

2014: A woman claims Fannon was creepy and asked for hugs, she told him no brushing it off, he continued to bother her with asking for a hug. This is creepy as :):):):). Fannon says it happened, Fannon also says she complained to the event organizer, and that he learned from the incident, while he may not agree completely with her story, he does not deny that it happened and that he was in the wrong.

2017: Ms. Bulkeley claims he harasseed her numerous times in a variety of creepy ways. And after he harassed her, she remained friends with him and invited him to her house to DM her group and to celebrate what a great DM he is or some crap. Fannon then later decided to not be a part of RNM the thing that she was an organizer for. She get pissed at him and they had a falling out. She then made claims that he repeatedly harassed her. While Fannon claims she is making it up entirely.

What did I miss? 3 women over 5 years, one of which is not really in dispute. Another that is disputed whether it was harassment or consensual and the last one disputed whether it ever happened.

 


(Reposting from home account to allay "sock monkey" concerns)

It has been suggested that I need to "collect my friends" in this thread - specifically, those individuals who have chosen to take my "cause" and use it to advance misogynistic ideas, victim-blaming tactics, MRA agendas, and worse.

Allow me to be intensely clear about this - they are NOT my friends, they in no way speak for me, and I find all such statements reprehensible and unworthy.

If you believe you need to push an agenda that vilifies women for stepping forward to report bad actors, do NOT do so in my defense.

If you believe you need to advance anything that looks like "Not All Men," leave me out of it. We are not friends.

Peace.
 


How is it misogynistic if it is not a blanket accusation of all women? Some women are good others are bad, just like men are, that is why we need proof not just hearsay!

Testimony by the victims IS proof!

I realize the poster has already been thread banned, but just wanted to emphasize this point. If people complain about your inappropriate behavior, that is not hearsay, it is proof.
 
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