NCAA News Archive - 2006

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Infractions case: Northern Illinois University


Aug 14, 2006 1:01:35 AM



The NCAA Division I Committee on Infractions has placed Northern Illinois University on probation for one year for limited violations in women’s basketball, mostly related to extra benefits given to a student-athlete by a faculty member. This was the university’s first major infractions case.

The extra benefits began in December 2003, concluded in June 2004 and totaled nearly $2,000, according to the committee’s public report.

The committee noted that the relationship with the faculty member began after a former assistant director of athletics placed the student-athlete in contact with the professor for mentoring due to personal difficulties the student-athlete was experiencing at the time.

According to the infractions committee’s report, the former assistant director of athletics provided a cursory explanation of NCAA guidelines to the faculty member, specifically that student-athletes cannot receive benefits beyond what any student at the university could expect to receive.

However, the former assistant director of athletics did not monitor the relationship; follow-up regarding potential extra benefits being received by the student-athlete; report the potential for extra benefits to appropriate staff at the university; and provide the faculty member any in-depth NCAA rules education before and during the relationship with the student-athlete.

As a result, the committee cited the assistant director of athletics for failure to monitor the situation. It noted the student-athlete should have realized the benefits were improper as well.

While the university considered the violations to be secondary in nature, the committee concluded the violations were major. Even though the student-athlete’s relationship with the faculty member was not based on athletics and the faculty member had a history of being generous with others, those facts were mitigating factors related only to possible penalties, the committee said.

The committee added that it took into account mitigating factors when considering penalties in the case.

"The violations were in the context of a relationship conceived out of a concern for the well-being of a student-athlete, and the faculty member who provided the extra benefits did not have an athletics motivation in her actions," the committee wrote in its report.

The Committee on Infractions has imposed the following penalties in the case:

  • One year of probation for the university beginning August 2, 2006. The committee said in its report that the standard minimum period of probation in major infractions cases is two years. The committee concluded that there was sufficient cause based on the facts of the case to impose just one year of probation.
  • The committee adopted the university’s penalty of banning the faculty member from serving as a mentor for student-athletes for two years; banning her from attending women’s basketball games at Northern Illinois for two years; and sending her a letter of reprimand from the director of athletics.
  • The committee adopted the university’s penalty of issuing a letter of reprimand to the former assistant director of athletics; requiring the former assistant director to undergo extensive NCAA rules education before the 2004-05 academic year; and recommended attendance at the 2005 NCAA Regional Seminar for Rules Education.
  • The committee adopted the university’s penalty of issuing a letter of admonishment to a former assistant women’s basketball coach for not reporting knowing about the impermissible housing provided to the student-athlete.

Members of the Division I Committee on Infractions who heard this case were Gene A. Marsh, professor of law, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, and chair of the committee; Paul T. Dee, director of athletics, University of Miami (Florida); Andrea L. Myers, director of athletics emeritus, Indiana State University; James Park, Jr., attorney, Frost, Brown Todd LLC; Josephine R. Potuto, professor of law, University of Nebraska, Lincoln; and Thomas E. Yeager, commissioner, Colonial Athletic Association.


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