The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

UGA lawsuits over fatal crash face long delays

Player’s attorney, also a state senator, accused of stalling.

- By Dylan Jackson Dylan. Jackson@ ajc. com

A pair of lawsuits that arose following a fatal crash that stunned the University of Georgia football program appear to be on hiatus until April, a delay the lawyer for Devin Willock’s father says benefits defendants Jalen Carter and the UGA Athletic Associatio­n.

State Sen. Bill Cowsert of Athens, who is representi­ng Carter, a former UGA defensive star, has told a judge he will step away from the cases through April 8. His filing cites a Georgia law that grants lawyer- legislator­s broad leave from their legal caseload during the legislativ­e session, which typically runs through the first few months of the year. The law allows Cowsert to effectivel­y halt hearings and discovery in the UGA cases, first filed last summer.

Carter is accused of negligentl­y racing Georgia recruiting analyst Chandler LeCroy in the early morning hours of Jan. 15, 2023, just moments before the crash that killed LeCroy and Willock, a Georgia football player, who was a passenger. Carter was charged with racing and reckless driving in March and pleaded no contest. In previous filings, Cowsert has denied his client is liable.

The lawsuits are brought by Willock’s family and former UGA football recruiting analyst Tory Bowles, who was also a passenger in the black Ford Expedition rented by the athletic associatio­n and driven by LeCroy.

Cowsert’s request for leave has drawn the ire of Atlanta attorney Terry Jackson, who is representi­ng Willock’s father, Dave Willock. In a brief filed last week, Jackson accused Cowsert of stalling the case to the benefit of Carter and the UGA athletic associatio­n.

Jackson’s filing paints a cozy relationsh­ip between Cowsert and UGA. He said the Athens senator is a member of a UGA football fan organizati­on where he rubs shoulders with UGA notables such as university President Jere Morehead, head coach Kirby Smart and Bryant Gantt, the football program’s director of player personnel and informal police liaison.

Jackson also makes the allegation, without providing evidence, that UGA is paying Cowsert to represent Carter and “keep a tab” on their former star, who now plays for the Philadelph­ia Eagles. Such an arrangemen­t, Jackson said, is a conflict of interest that warrants the senator’s removal from the case.

“Mr. Cowsert’s retainer should be exposed as a failed attempt by the UGAAA to deny justice, by delaying it indefinite­ly,” Jackson wrote.

Cowsert told The Atlanta Journal- Constituti­on that Jackson’s allegation­s are “totally false.” In a written statement, the athletic associatio­n also denied Jackson’s claims, adding his “willingnes­s to invent facts” should color the other allegation­s he’s made in his lawsuit.

“The recent allegation­s that the UGA Athletic Associatio­n ‘ hand selected’ counsel for Mr. Carter and has any

State Sen. Bill Cowsert, R- Athens, is representi­ng Jalen Carter but has told a judge he will step away from the cases through April 8. role whatsoever in funding his defense are complete fiction,” said Steven Drummond, an executive associate athletic director with the UGA athletic associatio­n.

The AJC has filed an open records request seeking records to determine if there are financial ties between UGA and Cowsert.

Georgia statute allows lawyerlegi­slators to stay “all aspects” of a case to allow them to step away from their practice during legislativ­e business, which can also include committee meetings, legislativ­e conference­s and special sessions. Cowsert is a member of several committees and serves as the vice chair of the state’s judiciary committee, according to his legislativ­e biography page.

The rule was somewhat curtailed in 2019, following an AJC investigat­ion into late Georgia House Speaker David Ralston’s years of excessive use of the law. The series found he had used continuanc­es to delay cases on behalf of clients accused of serious crimes.

Cartersvil­le attorney Lester Tate, who reviewed Jackson’s

most recent filings, said it isn’t unheard of for an organizati­on to provide legal counsel to one of its members. If a UGA football player was sued for accidental­ly running over a fan on the sideline, for instance, it wouldn’t be unusual for the program to fund the player’s legal defense.

Still, Tate notes that Carter had already declared for the NFL draft days before the crash and was seemingly on his way out of the program. If Jackson’s allegation­s are true, it would be a “surprising developmen­t,” he added.

But Tate, a past president of the State Bar of Georgia, is skeptical of Jackson’s argument that such an arrangemen­t constitute­s a conflict that would warrant Cowsert’s removal from the case. None of the defendants in the case have raised similar objections.

“You have to look at who are making these claims,” Tate said. “It’s the plaintiffs, not the people who are likely to be affected by it.”

This is not Jackson’s first attempt at removing Cowsert from the case.

In November, Jackson filed a brief asking the court to remove both Cowsert and his law partner, Michael Broun, who at the time was representi­ng another defendant in the case, arguing it was a conflict of interest for two lawyers from the same firm to represent separate defendants. A month later, Cowsert filed a brief denying Jackson’s claims. Still, Broun withdrew from the case.

Jackson’s filing in Gwinnett County State Court, where the lawsuits were filed, came days after attorneys for Bowles entered an amended complaint accusing UGA football staff of regularly drinking at recruiting events, including at Smart’s house, before driving recruits and their families in UGA rental vehicles. The complaint also alleged football coaches spent cash on unofficial recruits. Such spending may have violated NCAA rules prohibitin­g programs from spending money on unofficial recruiting visits.

The athletic associatio­n said it disputed the claims and would “vigorously” defend its interests in court.

THE ATLANTA JOURNAL- CONSTITUTI­ON

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 ?? NATRICE MILLER/ NATRICE. MILLER@ AJC. COM ??
NATRICE MILLER/ NATRICE. MILLER@ AJC. COM
 ?? JASON GETZ/ JASON/ GETZ@ AJC. COM ?? Former UGA star Jalen Carter is accused of negligence for his alleged involvemen­t in a fatal street race. He pleaded no contest to traffic charges.
JASON GETZ/ JASON/ GETZ@ AJC. COM Former UGA star Jalen Carter is accused of negligence for his alleged involvemen­t in a fatal street race. He pleaded no contest to traffic charges.
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