A former assistant high school volleyball coach in Forest Lake has been sentenced for sexually assaulting one of his players and another student after he was hired despite a conviction years earlier for a similar offense in Wisconsin.
Mark R. Kosloski, 48, of Wyoming, Minn., was sentenced Monday in Chisago County District Court to a four-year term after he pleaded guilty to third-degree criminal sexual conduct in two separately filed cases in connection with the encounters while he was a coach at North Lakes Academy.
Kosloski will serve 2 2⁄3 years in prison and the balance on supervised release. He will be registered as a predatory offender and be placed on supervised release for the rest of his life.
In arguing for the four-year term, prosecutors pointed out in a pre-sentence filing last week that Kosloski was convicted in western Wisconsin of fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct in 1999, when he was 24 and the victim was 16. He also admitted to sexual encounters with other teenage girls at that time, the filing continued.
"Despite this," the filing read, "he was hired as a coach at North Lakes Academy and positioned himself to be around young females where he could continue to offend with the same age group 20 years later. Due to this fact, the defendant has an inherent risk to [re-offend], regardless of his age."
Cam Stottler, the academy's executive director, cited "pending legal matters" and declined to explain Tuesday how Kosloski was allowed to coach at the school while being a convicted sex offender.
Stottler also declined to describe the academy's current background check policy other than to say it "meets all legal requirements in terms of hiring and maintaining up-to-date information of [academy] staff and employees."
One of the former students, now 21 years old, is suing the school and Kosloski for more than $50,000 and other damages in connection with being "sexually harassed, sexually abused and sexually assaulted" by Kosloski.