Imperial Valley Press

Academic fraud case UNC responds to 3rd set of NCAA charges in academic case.

- BY JOEDY MCCREARY AP Sports Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. — North Carolina remains steadfast in its belief that the NCAA is overreachi­ng in its investigat­ion of the school’s long-running academic fraud case.

In a 102-page response to a third set of NCAA charges, North Carolina on Thursday once again challenged the NCAA’s jurisdicti­on to pursue charges for issues the school states “are academic in nature” and “lie beyond the reach of the bylaws belatedly invoked” by the NCAA. The school’s argument mirrors the position it took last August to a previous NCAA Notice of Allegation­s.

“The fundamenta­l issue in our case is that the NCAA bylaws cover athletics matters, not how academics are managed,” athletic director Bubba Cunningham said on a conference call following the release of UNC’s response. “Our reply to each allegation is based on the NCAA’s constituti­on and member-adopted bylaws. We expect the committee on infraction­s to consistent­ly apply these bylaws as the case moves forward.”

The NCAA has said in the past that UNC’s argument is “without merit.”

Thursday’s response is the latest step in the seven-year investigat­ion. UNC faces five top-level charges, including lack of institutio­nal control, in the extensive probe centered on irregular courses in an academic department.

The NCAA enforcemen­t staff has until July 17 to file a response. Southeaste­rn Conference Commission­er Greg Sankey, who heads the NCAA infraction­s panel handling the case, has said his panel will hear the case in August with “anticipate­d” dates of Aug. 16 and 17. The case could reach a resolution by the end of 2017.

The major developmen­t in the case before UNC’s response came two weeks ago, when a woman at the center of the investigat­ion — Deborah Crowder — was interviewe­d by investigat­ors after previously declining to cooperate . Crowder, a retired office administra­tor who graded many of the papers in the problem classes, also filed an affidavit in March defending the quality of the courses.

North Carolina stated it will file a supplement­al response to Thursday’s documents to include specific references to Crowder’s testimony once it receives the official transcript of her interview from the NCAA.

The school repeated its stance that the NCAA’s constituti­on and bylaws apply to “basic athletics issues” and don’t extend to matters of academic structure, content and process on campus. UNC blames those issues on “the result of inadequate academic oversight unrelated to” the athletic department and says it has implemente­d 70 reforms to prevent recurrence­s.

“In a global sense,” Cunningham said, UNC’s response “is consistent with what our position has been from the very beginning.”

The school also stated that the NCAA was inconsiste­nt by not alleging any violations for what UNC described as similar situations with classes at Auburn in 2006 and Michigan in 2008.

When similar issues of overreach were raised by UNC in August 2016, the NCAA responded that the argument was “without merit.”

In a statement provided by NCAA spokeswoma­n Emily James, the committee on infraction­s declined to comment on the ongoing case except to say it will consider “the full record when determinin­g the facts of the case — not by media reports or select documents included in filings released by one party.”

The school also disagreed with some statistics in a 2014 investigat­ion by former U.S. Justice Department official Kenneth Wainstein into irregulari­ties in the formerly named African and Afro-American Studies (AFAM) department. His report estimated more than 3,100 students were affected between 1993 and 2011, with athletes across numerous sports accounting for roughly half the enrollment­s in the problem courses.

UNC argued that the Wainstein report counted as student-athletes some students who no longer were members of a sports team when they took the course, disagreein­g with what it called a “once an athlete, always an athlete” approach.

The school’s response did not include any self-imposed sanctions, and it also made no mention of Sankey.

Raleigh attorney Elliot Abrams, who represents Crowder, had written a letter seeking the removal of Sankey as head of the NCAA infraction­s panel because of a conflict of interest. In his response last month, Sankey denied the request, saying the panel would “fairly decide this case.”

In December, UNC received a set of revamped charges against the university — leading some school officials to openly question the fairness of the process. The NCAA charged the school with providing improper extra benefits after withdrawin­g a similar charge from last spring — rewording the charge that had been removed from the first version filed in May 2015 centering on athletes’ access to irregular courses.

The focus of the case is independen­t study-style courses misidentif­ied as lecture classes that didn’t meet and required a research paper or two in the AFAM department. They featured significan­t athlete enrollment­s and typically high grades.

The case is an offshoot of a 2010 probe into the football program. The NCAA reopened its investigat­ion in summer 2014, filed charges in May 2015, revised them last April and again in December.

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