Cadillac wrote:I heard from a guy who works on the grounds at TCU (interestingly enough an NTCC Professor), and he said that Gary Patterson was co-signing all the loans for the Football players.
Now that makes a hell of a lot sense. Players on full scholarship qualifying for student loans.
The NCAA is not involved in this charade, and probably won't be since a) No laws have been broken (Cuomo is threatening civil suits, not criminal charges), b) the schools the NY AG is investigating include some pretty important BCS names, c) no NCAA rules have been violated. TCU received no revenue from loan-broker International Sports Properties. It did receive about $6,000 per year (about $14,000 total) from loan-broker University Financial Services (also operating as Education Finance Partners), which worked directly with Financial Aid and had no connection to the Athletics Department.
In all but a handful of cases, there was no ethical lapse by any of the schools named, since the so-called "kickbacks" -- also known as revenue-share -- were simply added to the financial aid bottom line and redistributed to students. One of the very few schools actually caught in an ethical problem was UT-Austin, which wound up firing its former director of financial aid, Lawrence Burt, for self-dealing. While sitting on several loan company advisory boards, he was investing in some of the companies, and then listing them as UT preferred lenders.
Six other UT campuses are also under scrutiny, including Arlington, Dallas, Tyler, Pan American, San Antonio, and El Paso. Other institutions being investigated in this state include Baylor and Texas Tech. Nationally, the investigation has touched some pretty prestigious universities, including Columbia and Johns Hopkins. Both have already agreed to settlement deals with the state of New York.