New York State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo has issued subpoenas for 39 collegiate athletic departments in a probe of their relationships with student loan providers. At its most basic, this investigation is asking whether or not cash, kickbacks, gifts and other bribes or misleading measures were communicated between various student loan providers and the cited athletic departments.Cuomo is investigating whether athletic departments at these universities agreed to promote SFS loans to students in exchange for kickbacks.
"Students trust their University's athletic departments because so much of campus life at Division I schools centers around supporting the home team," said Cuomo. "To betray this trust by promoting loans in exchange for money is a serious issue, especially when Division I schools already generate tremendous revenue from their student athletes. Today's action is an important new step as we continue to examine the unethical conflicts that pervade the student loan industry.
"The Attorney General's office is specifically investigating whether athletic departments evaluated UFS interest rates before recommending their federal loans, or if their endorsement of UFS was based purely on payments from the lender. Such an arrangement would constitute revenue sharing, which is a violation New York state consumer protection laws, as well as a violation of federal law.
D-IA football schools named (prominent schools in bold): Arkansas State, Auburn, Bowling Green, Central Michigan, Colorado State, East Carolina, Florida Atlantic, Georgia Tech, Ohio, Oregon State, Rutgers, TCU, Tulane, Alabama-Birmingham, UCLA, UCF, Houston, Kansas, Louisville, Oregon, Pittsburgh, USF, UTEP. See link for complete list.
Of note: USC and Texas have also been scrutinized in a similar probe, but to my knowledge it has not been linked to their athletic departments but rather the university-wide financial aid offices of the schools.It's good that athletic departments have an awareness of and working relationship with loan providers, but obviously there's a problem when that relationship gets too cozy and bad loan options are pressed upon students and student-athletes.
(Via: Yahoo!)




















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
8-02-2007 @ 10:58AM
gilbert arizona auto insurance, car, home owner, life insurance said...
Are we leaving the steroid era and stepping into the "scandal" era?
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8-02-2007 @ 11:51AM
War Eagle Atlanta said...
Here's another NY attorney general out to save the world. Why, do you ask, is the attorney general of NY investigating something like this? Obviously, he is attempting to ride the publicity wave all the way into the governor's office and beyond, similar to his predecessor, former NY AG and current NY governor Eliot Spitzer.
How does a NY AG have the authority to subpoena officials from other states into New York? I don't know, but I'd suspect that some of these lenders are domiciled in NY. It's very similar to the current grandstanding by NYC mayor Michael Bloomberg, who is suing gun shops across the southeast for selling guns that eventually end up in the commission of crimes in NY. Let's all submit to the mighty will of the all powerful Empire State.
Give me a break. Let's get back to football already!
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8-02-2007 @ 8:35PM
Todd'92 said...
It does seem pretty preposterous that a New York State official is busting somebody for federal charges without the feds. And my gut reaction is the same as yours War Eagle, but, I'm still holding my breath. But I still think he's reaching for the limelight and may turn out to be Nifonging (wait til next years websters, it'll be there) the whole thing.
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