http://www.wralsportsfan.com/ncaa-f...-control-at-unc/14689222/#AiKdiAtOYwPHgzC2.99
The NCAA accused UNC of five violations of NCAA bylaws, most importantly of of providing benefits to student-athletes not available to the student body.
WRAL obtained a redacted copy of 59-page the Notice of Allegations and its hundreds of pages of exhibits after UNC leadership spent more than a week reviewing and redacting it in accordance with public records and student privacy laws....
The university, prompted by revelations during that investigation about student-athletes who got help with papers and classes that never met, conducted several reviews of the then-Department of African and Afro-American Studies, eventually hiring Kenneth Wainstein, who worked in the U.S. Attorney General's Office, with a mandate to report on academic improprieties dating back to the early 1990s.
Wainstein found 169 student-athletes at UNC-CH over the course of 18 years who benefited from classes that never met or had grades manipulated to keep them eligible.
Of the 169, 123 were football players, 15 were men's basketball players, eight were women's basketball players and 26 played in one of the Olympic sports.
The NCAA accused UNC of five violations of NCAA bylaws, most importantly of of providing benefits to student-athletes not available to the student body.
WRAL obtained a redacted copy of 59-page the Notice of Allegations and its hundreds of pages of exhibits after UNC leadership spent more than a week reviewing and redacting it in accordance with public records and student privacy laws....
The university, prompted by revelations during that investigation about student-athletes who got help with papers and classes that never met, conducted several reviews of the then-Department of African and Afro-American Studies, eventually hiring Kenneth Wainstein, who worked in the U.S. Attorney General's Office, with a mandate to report on academic improprieties dating back to the early 1990s.
Wainstein found 169 student-athletes at UNC-CH over the course of 18 years who benefited from classes that never met or had grades manipulated to keep them eligible.
Of the 169, 123 were football players, 15 were men's basketball players, eight were women's basketball players and 26 played in one of the Olympic sports.