Augusta men's basketball program committed academic misconduct violations

Posted on 6/2/22 12:00 PM

Augusta men's basketball program violated NCAA academic misconduct rules when the head and former assistant coaches provided academic assistance to a men's basketball student-athlete, according to a decision released by the Division II Committee on Infractions.

As a result, the student-athlete competed in 16 contests and received competition-related expenses while ineligible. The direct involvement by the head coach and former assistant coach demonstrated the head coach's failure to promote an atmosphere of compliance and failure to monitor. Additionally, the former assistant coach violated ethical conduct principles when he provided false or misleading information regarding his violation involvement. This case was considered through the cooperative summary disposition process in which all parties agreed to the facts and violations.

Academic Misconduct

A men's basketball student-athlete was struggling academically and worked with academic services for assistance and learning accommodations. Despite the availability of these academic resources, the head coach and former assistant coach took additional steps to help the student-athlete in impermissible ways. First, an academic coordinator witnessed the head coach editing and adding content to a paper the student-athlete wrote for an English class.

Additionally, during a virtually proctored exam, the academic coordinator/instructor observed the former assistant coach sitting with the student-athlete as he was taking the exam. The video also showed the student-athlete submitting answers without his hands on the keyboard and impermissibly using his phone during the exam. During an investigative interview, the student-athlete admitted that the former assistant coach gave him answers during the exam. These actions resulted in a violation of Augusta's university policies and NCAA academic misconduct rules. As a result, the student-athlete participated in 16 contests and received actual and necessary expenses while ineligible. Augusta further committed violations by failing to withhold the ineligible student-athlete from competition.

Unethical Conduct

The former assistant coach violated ethical conduct rules when he provided false information by denying involvement in the academic misconduct. His information was proven false by the video footage and the student-athlete's admission. After hindering the enforcement investigation process, the former assistant coach ultimately agreed to the violations.

Head Coach Responsibility

The head coach's direct involvement with the academic misconduct violations, as well as the conduct of his former assistant coach, demonstrated that he failed to promote an atmosphere of compliance and failed to monitor his staff. The head coach admitted that his involvement with the student-athlete's paper failed to meet his responsibilities as a head coach.

Penalties

The COI concluded that these were all major violations of NCAA rules. After considering Augusta's cooperation, corrective actions and relevant mitigating factors, the committee prescribed the following penalties:

Members of the Committee on Infractions are drawn from the NCAA membership and members of the public. The members of the COI who reviewed this case are Jessica Chapin, athletics director at American International; John David Lackey, attorney in private practice; Richard Loosbrock, faculty athletics representative at Adams State; Melissa Reilly, senior woman administrator and associate commissioner at the East Coast Conference; Leslie Schuemann, senior woman administrator and senior associate commissioner at the Great Midwest Atlantic Conference; and Jason Sobolik, assistant athletics director at Minnesota State Moorhead.