Report: Unauthorized evidence provided to the NCAA by the former UM player

It seems that the story concerning Connor Stalions and the case with the NCAA only begins to begin.
CBS News Detroit received information from a private investigator on Monday evening which shows the student-athlete listed in the 79-page NCAA report as “student-athlete 1” who lied to the former coach of the seconds Chris Partridge is exactly the same person who recorded a telephone call with Stalion without his consent. All of these documents were provided to an unknown third -party private investigation company, which was then given to the NCAA to help it start the case. CBS News Detroit also reported that the student-athlete was a former Michigan football player.
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But it didn’t stop there:
“The private investigator presented evidence that the same student -athlete who lied to the NCAA concerning Partridge – and who recorded a telephone call with Stalions – took videos from the personal computer of the former Michigan staff member in an unauthorized manner, and presented the videos to the unnamed private investigation company, which reported them by the NCAA.
Odey K. Meroueh, lawyer for Meroueh & Hallman LLP, spoke with CBS News Detroit for this story and thinks that Michigan would have a legitimate affair before the State Tribunal if it appealed the NCAA decision.
“It has been alleged that there was evidence that has been illegally obtained in this case … which count before the State Court,” said Odey K. Meroueh, lawyer at Meroueh & Hallman LLP. “The NCAA administrative body establishes its own rules in the State Court … The difference is that the State and the judge establish the rules.
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“With the NCAA, they might not make fun where the evidence comes from. They have no rules against this, but in the Court of State, similar to a criminal trial, when there is evidence that has illegally obtained, it is called the fruits of the toxic tree, and in this case, all that is obtained from this proof is considered inadmissible, which would make the case against Michigan licensed. “
The NCAA refused to provide Michigan where he obtained his proofs for this case. Now we know that he was a former player inside the program himself. It is rather unhappy because this former player ended up making the partridges turn – and later exempt by the NCAA – and was most likely a player in the Salle des Secresurs de Parridge.
Needless to say, it seems that it is the start of the detangling of who exactly provided this information to the NCAA, and why. Fuck, friends.



