The Sentinel-Record

UNC awaits NCAA ruling in academic case

- AARON BEARD

North Carolina has wrapped up a two-day hearing with an NCAA infraction­s committee panel that will decide whether the school faces penalties tied to its multi-year academic scandal.

Now the case goes into yet another holding pattern.

School officials spent much of Wednesday in a closed-door meeting with committee members in Nashville, Tenn. They returned Thursday morning for a second session lasting about 4½ hours with the panel that will determine whether UNC faces penalties such as fines, probation or vacated wins and championsh­ips.

NCAA spokeswoma­n Stacey Osburn confirmed the hearing was complete but both sides were mum afterward.

Osburn didn’t comment further because the panel must deliberate before issuing a ruling, which typically comes weeks to months after a hearing. UNC athletics spokesman Steve Kirschner said the school wouldn’t have any comments about the hearing either.

Getting through the hearing process was a major step toward resolution in a delay-filled case tied to irregular courses, though there’s still the potential for the case to linger beyond a ruling if UNC decides to appeal or pursue legal action. The school faces five top-level charges, including lack of institutio­nal control.

The focus is independen­t study-style courses in the formerly named African and Afro-American Studies (AFAM) department. The courses were misidentif­ied as lecture classes that didn’t meet and required a research paper or two for typically high grades.

In a 2014 investigat­ion, former U.S. Justice Department official Kenneth Wainstein estimated more than 3,100 students were affected between 1993 and 2011, with athletes making up roughly half the enrollment­s.

The NCAA has said UNC used those courses to help keep athletes eligible.

The case grew as an offshoot of a 2010 probe of the football program that resulted in sanctions in March 2012. The NCAA reopened an investigat­ion in summer 2014, filed charges in a May 2015, revised them in April 2016 and then again in December.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States