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AP: Investigators subpoena UNC's Austin

Friday, September 3, 2010

Investigators from the North Carolina Secretary of State's office have subpoenaed Tar Heels defensive tackle Marvin Austin, a person familiar with the situation said Friday.

The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the investigation is ongoing. Austin is one of 13 players who did not travel with the 18th-ranked Tar Heels to Atlanta for Saturday's opener against No. 21 LSU because of an NCAA probe.

Secretary of State Elaine Marshall's office is reviewing whether North Carolina's sports agents laws have been broken in the wake of the NCAA investigation into the school's football program.

The NCAA probe initially focused on whether Austin and receiver Greg Little got improper benefits from agents and has now expanded to possible academic violations.

George Jeter, a spokesman for the Secretary of State's office, declined to comment on the subpoena.

"All I can say is it's an active, ongoing inquiry at this time," he said.

Earlier Friday, the school said it had declared Austin, defensive ends Robert Quinn and Michael McAdoo, cornerbacks Kendric Burney and cornerback Charles Brown, and receiver Greg Little ineligible "for violating school and/or NCAA rules."

Another six players — top tailbacks Shaun Draughn and Ryan Houston; safeties Brian Gupton, Da'Norris Searcy and Jonathan Smith; and defensive end Linwan Euwell — are being held out of the game during the investigation.

North Carolina also said three other players — linebackers Quan Sturdivant and Bruce Carter, and safety Deunta Williams — didn't travel with the team as the school conferred with the NCAA on their status. Sturdivant and Carter were later cleared and were traveling to Atlanta on Friday night. However, Williams remains sidelined because the NCAA wanted more information before ruling on his status.

The news means the Tar Heels will be without at least six starters from a defense that ranked among the nation's best last season, including their entire secondary.

"We are disappointed the players' choices have denied them the opportunity to compete alongside their teammates and represent the University of North Carolina," coach Butch Davis said in a statement. "Our coaches and players have a tremendous challenge this weekend, and despite these circumstances, our team will be excited to face LSU."

It's unclear how many games Quinn, McAdoo, Burney, Brown, Little and Austin will miss. The announcement is a massive blow for a program that entered Davis' fourth season in position to contend for an Atlantic Coast Conference championship.

The optimism had been building since January, when Austin, Little, Burney, Sturdivant, Carter and Williams all announced they would return to school for their senior seasons instead of entering the NFL draft.

Little is the team's top receiver, while the rest of that group joined Quinn — a junior widely considered to be a high first-round pick — on a defense that returned nine starters from a unit that ranked among the nation's best last season.

Davis had suspended Austin indefinitely for violating team rules Wednesday.

"We are still working with the NCAA staff to resolve these eligibility issues," athletic director Dick Baddour said in a statement. "The NCAA is focusing on each of their situations on a case-by-case basis. Together we are working to determine their status in as thorough and fair a process as is possible."

There have been similar agent-related NCAA investigations at Alabama, Georgia and South Carolina, with links to a South Beach party attended by players from several schools earlier this year. The Gamecocks have suspended tight end Weslye Saunders for violating unrelated team rules while Crimson Tide defensive end Marcell Dareus has been declared ineligible for two games for accepting nearly $2,000 in improper benefits during two Miami trips.

North Carolina is one of 42 states and the federal government that has laws governing contact between sports agents and amateur college athletes. The state requires agents to register and prohibits them from offering gifts before a contract is signed. Violations can lead to criminal or civil penalties.

In July, Marshall's office sent a letter to the more than 100 agents registered with the state notifying them of the investigation and instructing them not to destroy records. She said then that her office can't punish athletes, but planned to talk to them about their conduct and interaction with agents.

Comments

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Voice of Reason

September 3, 2010 - 10:04 am EDT

Aw shucks! That's too bad. Hopefully come basketball season they'll find 12 basketball players ineligible too.

DaveW

September 3, 2010 - 11:37 am EDT

This may be the TIP OF THE ICEBERG. More could be uncovered later.This is a case of LACK OF INSTITUTIONAL CONTROL in Chapel Hill and I hope the NCAA hammers them hard.

swerdna

September 3, 2010 - 12:56 pm EDT

Yes, more could be uncovered... at OTHER schools also. If I were you, I wouldn't crow too loudly. Your team may be next!

ou812

September 3, 2010 - 2:23 pm EDT

Since I am a Duke fan I worry very little about the ethics of their football program. I have not had to worry for quite some time.

DaveW

September 3, 2010 - 2:31 pm EDT

This does include other schools. South Carolina and Alabama are schools involved.

Panacea

September 3, 2010 - 10:10 am EDT

I hope this means UNCG is taking athletic rules seriously.

Past time.

pragmatist

September 3, 2010 - 11:53 am EDT

Yeah, let's hope "UNCG"'s football team recovers from this.

Panacea

September 3, 2010 - 1:34 pm EDT

Oops. Wrong school.

DaveW

September 3, 2010 - 2:29 pm EDT

The UNCG football team is both UNDEFEATED AND UNSCORED UPON.

leroy

September 3, 2010 - 11:30 am EDT

I like how the writer keeps referring to the players as 'student-athletes'. Is the irony intentional?

General Greensboro

September 3, 2010 - 11:51 am EDT

Nope, not intentional. I'm throwing a flag on myself for that — 5 yards for illegal motion (rewriting the university press release too quickly).

In any case, I've posted the AP version, which is a lot clearer than the original.

GG

swerdna

September 3, 2010 - 12:42 pm EDT

I have long been a UNC fan, and I'm very disturbed over things being found. However, if infractions have occurred and rules have knowingly been broken, then I totally favor severe penalties on any and all student athletes. I personally think kids now very often aren't held accountable for their poor decisions. When this happens at a young age, it can carry over into the teens and then into adulthood.

If the bad decisions made by these young men ruin or severely damage their careers, then so be it. It will be a tough lesson learned the hard way. At some point, everyone has to pay for decisions they've made. Promising student athletes should not be exempt from this "life's lesson."

gatecitycanes

September 3, 2010 - 2:28 pm EDT

You know the last thing the NCAA wants to do is have to investigate on of their favorite institutions. You've gotta believe that if these events had occurred at any other school they would be on probation already. They are doing everything they can to keep that from happening at their precious "public Ivy".

DaveW

September 3, 2010 - 3:02 pm EDT

The NCAA has new leadership. Myles Brand is no longer in charge. The new leadership did not mind dropping the hammer on Southern Cal so UNC can get it as well.

Citywatch

September 3, 2010 - 3:19 pm EDT

Public Ivy? How about poison ivy. UNC football's APR rankings were in the middle of the ACC pack - even with the help of a tutor.

DaveW

September 9, 2010 - 12:41 pm EDT

If UNC truely wants to get to the bottom of this an independent investigation team needs to go to work on the case.If UNC invstigates itself a coverup is VERY possible.I hope as an NC resident and taxpayer that UNC is serious about finding the truth and correcting any wrongdoings.If this is the case an INDEPENDENT group with no ties to UNC will do the investigating.Trust in the school by the general public could be on the way again if this takes place.

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