With the latest evidence in regards to former 2-sport UNC star Julius Peppers indicating the academic fraud/scandal could have been in place since the last 1990's....this may not end well for someone (probably NC A&T).
See links for some recent updates this week:
North Carolina reviews possible post of Peppers' transcript
The University of North Carolina is investigating how what appears to be a transcript for former football star Julius Peppers surfaced on the university's website.
In a statement Monday, the school said it has removed the link and that
it couldn't discuss confidential student information covered by federal
privacy laws. The school didn't confirm the authenticity of the partial
grade summary, which lists Peppers' full name - Julius Frazier Peppers -
at the top.
http://www.usatoday.com/sports/college/s...57033310/1
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Peppers' transcript might point to broader academic issues at UNC
By Dan Kane - dkane@newsobserver.com
Tags: Julis Peppers | UNC Football | UNC basketball | Julius Nyang’oro | Deborah Crowder
On the football field, Julius Peppers was one of the most dominating players to ever wear a UNC uniform, an athlete dubbed a “freak of nature” so skilled that he helped take the university’s men’s basketball team to the Final Four in 2000.
But in the classroom, Peppers was a marginal student with a grade point average so low he was continually at risk of losing the opportunity to play, according to an academic transcript bearing his name. What kept bailing him out were several classes in the Department of African and Afro-American Studies, a relatively young academic unit led by department chair Julius Nyang’oro
http://www.newsobserver.com/2012/08/13/2...rylink=cpy
North Carolina's widening academic scandal could be test case for the NCAA's newfound power
Yahoo Sports Pat Forde
Well, that didn't take long.
After the NCAA circumvented its own crime-and-punishment process and blew up Penn State last month, we all wondered how long it would take for a follow-up test case to measure the willingness of the "new NCAA" to flex its precedent-setting muscles again. Was the Penn State case a sign of a new era in policing of athletic programs gone bad, or an isolated blip brought on by a school's unique abdication of morals and responsibilities?
http://sports.yahoo.com/news/ncaaf--fbc-...ation.html