TBJ: UNC AD expects investigation will find more academic improprieties

Triangle Business Journal staff writer Jason deBruyn released a story this afternoon with some very interesting statements from UNC AD Bubba Cunningham. The statements are interesting, but for anyone not currently sipping wine and eating cheese in the city limits of Chapel Hill they are hardly surprising.

Go here to read the full piece by deBruyn at bizjournals.com.

Cunningham said he expects the new investigation, announced by Thorp on Aug. 16, to find that irregularities occurred before 2007, and possibly before the late 1990s as well. The error that UNC-CH made when announcing results of the initial investigation, he says, was that it was not more clear that the school suspected these irregularities went back further than 2007.

Cunningham expects that irregularities that occurred before 2007 will be the same type as those found in the previous investigation. “But we have implemented changes going forward,” he says.

The piece ends with this line from Cunningham:

“How far back should the investigation go? 1988? 1978?” he said. “The point is that we’ve made changes going forward.”

For starters, would not a true investigation want to uncover the root of the problem and identify those responsible for the transgressions? To help our readers better compute the statements from UNC, we siphoned some of these terms we keep hearing through our UNC-Cheatspeak-Translator-5000. It produced some interesting results:

“Review” translates to “fake investigation to appease the masses but uncover nothing.”

“Academic improprieties” translates to “cheating to keep athletes eligible so we have an unfair competitive advantage.”

“Irregularity” translates to “fake classes.” (Note: that this should not be confused with “easy classes.”)

“Changes” translates to “shift around the people responsible but continue to pay them so they’ll (continue to) be quiet.”

“But we have implemented changes going forward” translates to “we will do all we can to keep from getting caught again.” (This wouldn’t be so funny except UNC was literally setting up fake classes while the NCAA “investigators” were still enjoying their post-“investigation” burger and beer at Top of the Heel before heading back to Indianapolis.)

“Error that UNC made when announcing results of the initial investigation was that it was not more clear that the school suspected these irregularities went back further than 2007.” translates to

… well…

Our UNC Cheatspeak Translator 5000

Is this what UNC has reduced itself to: The old “Welp. Now that we’re caught lying what we really meant to say was…” defense? Most folks we associate with perfected that in elementary school, outgrew it in middle school, and laughed at it in high school. Yet here we have the administration from the self-proclaimed “public ivy” institution of higher education trying to shove this racket down the throats of wide-mouthed gawkers watching as they somehow amazingly keep throwing fuel on the fire they’re trying so desperately to contain.

If the question is more than a rhetorical one, Mr. Cunningham, you should probably at least carry your investigation back to 1993 when Dr. Nyang’oro was promoted to be the first head of the newly created AFAM department. Within one year, 4 of 5 starters on the National Champion basketball team were proud majors in his curriculum.

A word of warning since you’re asking, though Mr. Cunningham. You best hold your nose and cover your head. In case they have been as honest with you over there as they have the rest of us, you probably need to know that the guy who had your job at the time is quietly sitting in a position of power in Greensboro. You also might want to duck and cover before you open that pandora’s box considering the most sacred legend in UNC athletics lore was not-so-ironically enough simultaneously in charge of your golden goose basketball program instantly filled with AFAM majors.

*****
SFN Addition:
It’s clear The Flagship is desperately trying to regain control of this unraveling scandal. Governor Martin has been hired to lead an investigation, and supposedly the findings will be made public once the investigation — er, review — is complete.

The University has hired former advisor to President Clinton, Doug Sosnik, as consultant to guide them through the PR battle (WRAL):

A former advisor to President Bill Clinton has joined the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s public relations effort as the university weathers an investigation into academic impropriety in at least one department.

Doug Sosnik began working as a consultant for the university earlier this month, a UNC spokeswoman said Tuesday. The addition comes about 13 months after UNC hired a Raleigh public relations firm to work on academic issues and two years after the NCAA began a probe into rules violations within the university’s football program…

Details on Sosnik’s compensation have not been released. The school has paid nearly $600,000 on academic scandal-related services, but says none of that money came from taxpayers.

Previously, this was reported (WRAL:

Martin and his team plan to review more departments and all athletic programs at UNC-CH. He said that Thorp asked him to complete his work by mid-October and that he plans to get started early next week.

“And non-athletes, if you have a class that gives an easy grade to everybody, I think that needs to be identified as a corruption of the process,” Martin said.

Martin said Thorp told him everything is fair game in the investigation – no restrictions, no limitations. The report of Martin’s findings will be made public once it is complete.

“(We will) go where the evidence takes us,” Martin said.

There’s no dollar figure on the upcoming review. However, the school has paid nearly $600,000 for other scandal-related services. Outside legal bills are estimated at about $467,000 so far. Additionally, for the past 13 months, the school has paid a Raleigh-based communications firm $113,000.

Question 1: Why, after two years of evading, lying and redacting, is UNC still dictating the terms of this investigation? How independent is that? The arrogance, even amidst a failed system, remains astounding.

Question 2: Will we see the results of Martin’s investigation in their entirety? Or, will Thorp & Co. continue the policy of redacting anything incriminating and hiding behind FERPA and forcing the media to file FOIA requests?

Question 3: It seems noble that no taxpayer funding is being used for a PR consultant. But, will the use of private funding provide a neat loophole to prevent FOIA requests if the report is in any part redacted?

UNC Scandal

73 Responses to TBJ: UNC AD expects investigation will find more academic improprieties

  1. GAWolf 08/24/2012 at 10:35 AM #

    There are whispers in the wind that this is about to explode. Some say it will make SMU look like child’s play. I, for one, will believe it when I see it, but that’s the rumbling.

  2. TruthBKnown Returns 08/24/2012 at 11:01 AM #

    GAWolf, I hear things like that (on blogs like this). But I wonder, are we all seeing the same posts, or are you hearing that from a reputable source somewhere?

  3. TLeo 08/24/2012 at 11:13 AM #

    I would like to hear from GaWolf as well if this is something heard from just internet boards or something more concrete. I think the decades of cheating seriously rival the offenses of SMU and deserve similar penalties. It is amazing that that the ncaa is apparently ignoring this and we all know that prissy blue swofford is hoping it will all blow over. I think that in itself speaks volumes of his involvement in the fraud over the decades. If he comes out against his school, they have the info to implicate him in all of this and ruin him.

  4. TeufelWolf 08/24/2012 at 1:14 PM #

    Any new word on Purvis?

  5. JohnGalt78 08/24/2012 at 1:51 PM #

    Hate to be negative, but my prediction is that NOTHING else will happen to the Holes in regard to the NCAA. Certainly no Death Penalty and the banners will remain. I just think the Carolina Way has very deep roots that connect to so many button pushers that can protect them while punishing others. Gawd I hope I’m wrong.

  6. 85Designo 08/24/2012 at 3:17 PM #

    If NOTHING happens then that will mean either every other school in the ACC is doing it or the AD’s, coaches and administrators are all looking out to protect each other i.e. the Good Ol’ Boy network. They must love Swoffee so much that they feel like they have to help the poor bastard.

  7. McCallum 08/24/2012 at 5:17 PM #

    They’ll always have women’s soccer.

    Peace out (for “diversity”)

    McCallum

  8. fullmoon1 08/24/2012 at 5:31 PM #

    I am skeptical but I still have a very hard time envisioning nothing happening. If nothing is done by the NCAA then rules have fallen by the wayside and welcome to the new world of sports. The NCAA may drag its feet but they will be under to much pressure from previously punished schools to act. It may be for the wrong reasons but no way they can ignore it.

  9. GAWolf 08/24/2012 at 6:49 PM #

    What may ultimately sink their ship with the NCAA is the concept of APR. If the NCAA is going to ban the likes of UConn from the NCAA tournament for not having a high enough APR, then how the hell can the justify not thumping the Heels for giving students fake A’s to bolster their team APR?

    They simply cannot do both. Either scrap the APR concept, or punish academic cheaters. I don’t see how they can avoid a revolt if they don’t act.

  10. Wulfpack 08/24/2012 at 7:54 PM #

    If the NCAA does not act, it speaks volumes. I just do not see how that can be the case. Talk about speaking out of both sides of their mouths.

  11. McCallum 08/24/2012 at 8:41 PM #

    A bit of advice if I might, simply enjoy the smoldering flavor of the outed hypocrite. A self evident truth is just that and tis what we are all watching.

    Powerful, powerful people are invested in protecting chapel hill. To burn it down as it should be done is the bridge too far.

    McCallum

  12. choppack1 08/24/2012 at 9:00 PM #

    Ga Wolf – In the worst case scenario, Butch decides which records are personal and which ones aren’t. In the best case scenario, you’ve got the proverbial “smoke filled room” where a select few decide what the public can and cannot see. The ruling is a slap in the face to the concept of transparency.

    As I mentioned in another thread on the forums – Davis used this phone almost solely. Given his position, his likely work week (probably upward of over 60 hours a week), the high profile nature of his job, and the fact that everything he does promotes “Butch the brand and UNC football” – there should be very few “personal” calls. Those calls to Condi and Dungy were just as likely to be “professional” – advice on handling a crisis, leadership and work/life balance, etc…As such, if Manning has integrity when it comes to this matter – which I kind of doubt – we’ll see VERY few personal calls, and liberally side with most calls being a business call.

    Look at this way – if this was a governor or a mayor – and his most valuable assistant – an assistant that he’s known for 20+ years – was found to have committed some of the most serious political crimes in the history of state government, and his son’s personal tutor was also found to have been HEAVILY involved in this scandal – after being forced out of her gov’t job for improper conduct – what would be his position if this mayor/governor only used his personal phone to conduct gov’t business?

    You think he’s letting this guy or a group of lawyers (with no accountability to no one) decide what’s personal and what’s business?? I guarantee you he’s not if he’s a republican.

  13. choppack1 08/24/2012 at 9:46 PM #

    Ga – since you are an attorney – I’d love to hear your thoughts on why the ruling is to the letter of the law. There’s a good chance it is – I’m arguing from the general perspective of transparency and the big picture – certainly not based on the specific language of the law.

  14. highstick 08/24/2012 at 11:17 PM #

    but that’s the rumbling.

    For those of you old enough to remember the saying….”Rumble, young man, rumble”! Time to go to the mats!

    Chop, my fear is that Butch was not that dumb…The 216 has been a “smoke screen” all along..He used a 219, a 212, and a few 500’s that were burners” and there’s no track on those cause they reside in Jordan Lake by now…

  15. groupthink 08/25/2012 at 8:08 AM #

    if you change your major as a senior in 93, it indicates that a large amount of electives in afam were taken earlier. they took classes from dr j before the major in afam was set up. he was teaching at unc for 8 years prior to the major being established. debora crowder changed grades in the system and we never hear about that. she didnt need to change dr j’s grades, all a’s and b’s, so who’s grades did she change? could she change math grades? was she changing athletes only? for how many years?

  16. Old School Wolf 08/25/2012 at 10:52 AM #

    Great article. There is a thread on PackPride Brickyard re: annual pensions in NC (linked from WECT.) Baddour is listed at $278,000, Bernadette Gray-Little at $211,000, and old Deano at $201,000. I guess we tax payers will be supporting all the cheating and enabling coaches and administrators for some time to come. I also wonder how many coaches and administrators had their careers and therefore pensions affected by the cheaters. Just another aspect of what will be judged to be an intentional and institutional abuse of athletes and rules besides the wins and losses. Criminal charges are deserved and called for in my opinion.

  17. triadwolf 08/26/2012 at 9:35 AM #

    I believe the NCAA has a statute of limitations regarding violations. However, I wonder what happens if an independent investigation were to determine that classes going back several years were bogus and that credit for those classes be removed from students transcripts. A pipe dream I know, but it would put the NCAA in a precarious position regarding eligibility of past teams and APR.

    Still, I believe the NCAA statute of limitations is 4 or 5 years which still impacts one basketball national championship. If that were to get stripped and that was the only real impact, I’d fairly be satisfied.

  18. turfpack 08/26/2012 at 11:52 AM #

    I think the real problem is when you have a elitist belief in your school and you think – it can’t be that bigga deal -it want take long and everything will be Ok – there was a problem but..everybody does it…so what!
    It is not just fans that believe this…Some Administrators, faculty, Media, and Govenrment officials. That mindset will be the many cuts to a slow death for a university that will cause it’s on demise. “You can’t handle the truth” That is the problem!

  19. choppack1 08/26/2012 at 1:39 PM #

    triadwolf – My memory was that they did. However, for Penn State – they had a punishment effective 1998 (vacated wins.)

    So, as has been noted – with the Penn State ruling – they essentially through the NCAA review “process” out the window. As such, it’s only fair that they should do so – especially when facing a scandal that IMHO – is more of a threat to college sports, than something like the Penn State case, which was a criminal issue.

  20. NCMike 08/26/2012 at 7:56 PM #

    Per Mark Armstrong at WTVD(on his twitter), Purvis can practice this year but can’t play this year. This supposedly told to him directly from Gott. Supposedly state is now appealing this. Sounds crazy but check out his twitter.

    It also appears that almost everyone knew there was going to be a problem which may explain why Duke, UNC, Ky and others stopped recruiting him last year.

    https://twitter.com/mattnorlander/status/119059855045701634

  21. choppack1 08/26/2012 at 10:18 PM #

    NCMike – there’s a lot of different info out there. Some of it states that we are seeing a positive step at each point in the process. Keep in mind – this time last week – Purvis couldn’t even enroll. Now, he’s in school – AND he can practice.

    It appears he’s taking steps towards some type of eligibility (at least to this unsophisticated eye). It may mean he can’t play this year or it could mean that he can – but we haven’t yet gotten to that point in the process.

  22. MattN 08/27/2012 at 8:50 AM #

    My guy with alleged inside info says we are cautiously optomisitic Purvis will be cleared to play the entire year.

  23. jrsr 08/30/2012 at 6:23 AM #

    Good day to get the WSJ and look in the Personal Journal!
    See the “College Football’s Grid of Shame”
    Now see the bottom of the chart…..UNC & Miami

    It seems NCSU is on the way up and the UNC Way is on the way down!

    GO PACK…leaving for Atlanta tomorrow morning.

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