INDIANAPOLIS---The
NCAA Division I Committee on Infractions has penalized Purdue
University for major and secondary violations in its women's basketball
program.
The committee
noted that the case was narrow in scope, but serious in nature, finding
that a former assistant coach and former student-athlete violated the
principles of ethical conduct. It was found that the former assistant
coach committed academic fraud with the full knowledge and complicity
of the student-athlete. It was also found that the former assistant
coach and former student-athlete provided false and misleading
information to the university regarding the violations. The same coach
also made impermissible telephone calls in violation of NCAA recruiting
rules and provided extra benefits to student-athletes.
Penalties
for the violations include placing the university on two years of
probation, a reduction in women's basketball scholarships, permanent
ineligibility for the involved student-athlete and a three-year
show-cause penalty for the former assistant coach. Under this
show-cause penalty, if the former assistant coach seeks athletically
related employment with another NCAA member school during the next
three years, she and the hiring institution must appear before the
Committee on Infractions to determine whether her duties should be
limited.
The former
assistant coach admitted to conducting research and reading a text book
in an effort to assist a former women's basketball student-athlete with
an assigned paper but denied committing academic fraud. She also
admitted typing, correcting and making revisions to the paper, which
led the university to conclude in an independent assessment that the
paper was partially plagiarized and thus constituted academic fraud.
In
addition, it was found that both the former assistant coach and
involved student-athlete provided false and misleading information to
the university's athletics compliance staff in an attempt to conceal
the academic fraud violations.
Although
the former head women's basketball coach was not in violation of NCAA
rules, the committee stated in its report that it was troubled that the
former head coach was made aware that the former assistant coach may
have committed academic fraud but dismissed the allegations as not
credible after conducting her own inquiry. Members of the women's
basketball staff brought the issue forward to the former head coach in
November 2005 and again in early January 2006. The coach's dismissal of
the information was in direct conflict with the university policy,
which states that possible NCAA violations should be reported
immediately to the director of athletics, the respective sports
administrator or the director of compliance. However, the information
was not brought to the attention of one of these university officials
until February 2006.
It
was also found during the university's investigation that the former
assistant coach made a total of 105 impermissible telephone calls to
two prospective student-athletes. The university did not believe the
violations constituted a major infraction due to a perceived lack of a
significant recruiting advantage. The committee, however, concluded
that because the impermissible calls were neither isolated nor
inadvertent, they did not fit the definition of a secondary violation
and must be considered a major infraction, regardless of the level of
recruiting advantage.
This case also involved three secondary violations, which are further detailed in the public report.
In determining the penalties, the Committee on Infractions considered
the university's self-imposed penalties and corrective actions. The
committee also took into account that the violations in this case were
self-discovered and self-reported, as well as limited to one former
coach and one student-athlete. The penalties, some of which were
self-imposed by the university and adopted by the committee, are as
follows:
Public reprimand and censure.Two years of probation (August 22, 2007, to August 21, 2009).Reduction
in women's basketball program scholarships by three. The university
will reduce total grants from 15 to 13 during the 2007-08 academic
year. The university already reduced one scholarship during the 2006-07
academic year. The institution declared
the former student-athlete permanently ineligible and did not seek
reinstatement. She was permitted to retain her athletics scholarship so
that she could continue to pursue a degree at the university. Because
she decided to remain at Purdue on scholarship, her grant-in-aid was
counted as the one grant loss for 2006-07 academic year.The former assistant coach received a three-year show-cause penalty (August 22, 2007, to August 21, 2010).
The
Committee on Infractions consists of conference and institutional
athletics administrators, faculty and members of the public. The
committee independently rules on cases investigated by the NCAA
enforcement staff and determines appropriate penalties. The committee's
findings may be appealed to the Infractions Appeals Committee.
The
members of the Committee on Infractions who reviewed this case are
Josephine Potuto, the Richard H. Larson Professor of Constitutional Law
at the University of Nebraska College of Law and chair of the
committee; Paul Dee, director of athletics at the University of Miami,
and formerly the university's general counsel; Eileen Jennings, general
counsel at Central Michigan University; Ted Leland, the vice president
for advancement at the University of the Pacific, and formerly the
director of athletics of, among others, Stanford University; Gene
Marsh, James M. Kidd Sr. Professor of Law at the University of Alabama,
Tuscaloosa School of Law; Andrea Meyers, athletics director emeritus,
Indiana State University; and Dennis Thomas, the commissioner of the
Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference and formerly director of athletics at
Hampton University.
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