Noah Shannon should sue for $150M, settle with the state for $20M and Sanger should get thrown in with general population in Ft Madison for 10 years.
None of that will happen, but it should.
Gosh yes.
Noah Shannon should sue for $150M, settle with the state for $20M and Sanger should get thrown in with general population in Ft Madison for 10 years.
None of that will happen, but it should.
Speaking of Noah Shannon, any chance he gets his year of eligibility back? Does he even want to? That would be awesome to have him come back to be in the defensive line rotation.
My fear is that from the sounds of the way the court hearings are going, even if it is reversed (appealed), the NCAA won't reverse course on their decisions. If I was Noah Shannon, I would be finding a damn good attorney.
You also have a little thing called sovereign immunity to work around.Noah Shannon likely has a much better case of diminished earnings capacity than the Estate of Chris Street had. Proving damages will be tough, but if this was an invalid search, whoa boy, he better get some big cash.
There is a concept in the law called Fruit of the Poisonous Tree, which basically means that all evidence that was gathered or derived from illegal searches is not admissible in court to prove guilt. A couple problems here. First, while none of us like how all this went down, I am not entirely certain what the agents did here was illegal. That needs to play out in court. Second, the NCAA is not the government and is not determining whether Shannon committed a crime. The evidence, however, gathered, pretty clearly shows that Shannon bet on college sports and every kid who has ever been an NCAA athlete is told repeatedly that is a No No.Speaking of Noah Shannon, any chance he gets his year of eligibility back? Does he even want to? That would be awesome to have him come back to be in the defensive line rotation.
My fear is that from the sounds of the way the court hearings are going, even if it is reversed (appealed), the NCAA won't reverse course on their decisions. If I was Noah Shannon, I would be finding a damn good attorney.
This part seems pretty cut and dry that they broke laws. I don't think they can go around geofencing places without warrants and probable cause. And once told no by his superiors to go on and continue doing it anyway I think that whole DCI department is in a world of trouble.There is a concept in the law called Fruit of the Poisonous Tree, which basically means that all evidence that was gathered or derived from illegal searches is not admissible in court to prove guilt. A couple problems here. First, while none of us like how all this went down, I am not entirely certain what the agents did here was illegal. That needs to play out in court. Second, the NCAA is not the government and is not determining whether Shannon committed a crime. The evidence, however, gathered, pretty clearly shows that Shannon bet on college sports and every kid who has ever been an NCAA athlete is told repeatedly that is a No No.
So, I don't see the NCAA changing course here. Hopefully, Noah gets drafted.