Yes, they all knew the federal court judge was going to buy the draft and NIL argument, which you claim was a stretch. Unbelievable.
If she came forward and cooperated, they would not have proceeded? Seriously?
Didn't they drop the administrative proceeding after the season was over because it was moot?
Their administrative proceeding does not have to be a criminal proceeding requiring "proof beyond a reasonable doubt."
No, Illinois did not do what was required of it by department policy when suspending him. Read the opinion. That was the point of it.
Remember when people were spooging all over Guenther Jr. for his explanation of the process blah blah blah. It came back to bite him in the ass because the judge specifically cited his press conference and how Illinois did not live up to what he said the process was.
Spark = Custard is a match. Who knew?
I think they had a good idea that the judge would 'make them' let him play, yeah. I'm surprised you find that even remotely hard to believe.
Of course the accuser was not going to present her evidence to a UIUC OSCR panel. No accuser is ever going to present their evidence in an upcoming criminal trial to some university's OSCR or Title IX board. Any requirement that those boards determine the accused's guilt or innocence is a non-starter, because those boards are never, ever going to have the evidence to make that determination.
And THAT is why the investigation was dropped - not because the season was over (nominally, anyway), but because the OSCR board wrote that they did not have 'access to the complainant, the complainant's witness', or 'the complete Lawrence Police Department file'. And OF COURSE they didn't. No OSCR or Title IX board is ever going to have access to those things. A regulation stating that those boards need to determine the guilt or innocence of a player is, in practicality, a regulation stating that those players cannot be suspended pre-conviction because those entities will never have access to the complainant's evidence or the police file or any of the other evidence from the upcoming trial.
No, the TRO did not say that UIUC DIA didn't follow its own policies. It said they did, in fact, but that the policies as-written violated Shannon's right to due process and harmed his ability to make NIL money, and that that outweighs the harm done to UIUC by not allowing them to enforce their disciplinary policies. The judge wrote:
"While the Court recognizes the strong interest the University has in acting pursuant to its policies, the court concludes that the irreparable harm to [Shannon] by application of the DIA Policy outweighs the harm to Illinois."
She did NOT say that Illinois DIA didn't follow their policies. She said their DIA policy (the same one every AD has everywhere) violated Shannon's right to make money via NIL, because he wasn't granted a sham OSCR 'trial'. The OSCR later dropped their investigation entirely because, as anyone paying attention knew would be the case, they had none of the evidence they'd need to determine his guilt.