šŸ“” Ole Miss has released its NCAA response

Barney's brother has his own feelings about the head coach. I'm sensing the love has gone out of their relationship.

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OXFORD – More fallout from the NCAA's probe into Ole Miss' football program continued Sunday.

Rebel Rags, an Oxford-based retail clothing store specializing in Ole Miss gear, has filed a lawsuit against Mississippi State's Leo Lewis and Kobe Jones, and Lindsey Miller in Lafayette County Circuit Court.

Charlie Merkel, one of the attorneys representing Rebel Rags, confirmed the suit was filed Friday afternoon and the servicing process was completed Sunday. Mississippi State had no comment on the situation.

Merkel, who is based out of Merkel and Cocke, P.A. in Clarksdale, said Rebel Rags is suing those three for "defamation, slander, conspiracy and commercial disparagement stemming from false statements made to the NCAA and have since been published in the (university's response to the) notice of allegations."

What Merkel is referring to is allegation No. 9 in the university's latest notice of allegations.

Former Ole Miss defensive line coach Chris Kiffin and former off-field staffer Barney Farrar were alleged to have arranged for $2,800 in impermissible recruiting inducements in the form of free merchandise from Rebel Rags to the those three individuals.

The alleged violations took place between Jan. 25 and 27, 2013 and between March 28, 2014 and Jan. 31, 2016. The allegation is a Level I violation and one the university disputed thoroughly in its response.

"(T)here is no proof that corroborates the claims of [Family Member 1], [Student-Athlete 39], or [Student-Athlete 40] that each of them received free merchandise from [Booster 8], much less at the direction of a football staff member," the response stated.

"Not a single witness corroborates these claims – in fact, every other witness denies it, including those closest to the prospects and without University affiliation."

The two student-athletes, who were recruits at the time, said they received hundreds of dollars in free merchandise, but the response argued Rebel Rags' purchase records disprove those claims.

Kiffin and Farrar's individual responses both denied the allegation as well. In addition, there were also denials of the allegation from 15 former and current student-athletes and parents, who were asked about Rebel Rags during the investigation, in the university's response.

Chuck Rounsaville of the Ole Miss Spirit was the first to report the news Sunday night.

http://www.clarionledger.com/story/...ewis-and-kobe-jones-lindsey-miller/388134001/
 
I've probably read a dozen articles in the last few weeks from the Ledger and every one of them--at least it seems to thinking back--have that ridiculous sound track playing as the background for their video about the response being released. I swear it sounds like a death knell from a cheesy afternoon soap only found on the Life network.
 
https://www.si.com/college-football...ootball-rebel-rags-lawsuit-laremy-tunsil-ncaa


QUICKLY

  • A civil complaint filed Friday by a retailer Rebel Rags in Oxford, Miss., in relation to Ole Miss's ongoing NCAA case could have significant implications going forward.
Monday June 12th, 2017
A business in Oxford, Miss., has filed a civil complaint alleging defamation that could reverberate through the University of Mississippi’s ongoing NCAA case. Rebel Rags LLC, an Oxford-based clothing company, filed the complaint Friday in Lafayette County Circuit Court.

The suit alleges defamation in the NCAA testimony of two Mississippi State football players, Leo Lewis and Kobe Jones, and also Lindsey Miller, the estranged stepfather of former Rebel star Laremy Tunsil. In Ole Miss’s response to the NCAA’s notice of allegations last week, it attempts to deny the allegations that two recruits and the family member of a recruit—Lewis, Jones and Miller—received a total of $2,800 in gear from Rebel Rags.

Sports Illustrated spoke Sunday evening with Rebel Rags’s attorney, Charles Merkel, who explained that the store ā€œhas caught the broadside of lies.ā€ The suit has yet to become public because it was filed on Friday afternoon and has yet to register in the court’s computer system.

Miller’s lawyer, Matthew Wilson of Spring Hill, Tenn., released a statement to Sports Illustrated regarding the suit on Sunday night.

ā€œLindsey Miller has been named in a lawsuit that was filed by a particular retail outlet,ā€ Wilson said in the statement. ā€œThe complaint relates to comments Mr. Miller allegedly made to the NCAA. Mr. Miller intends to mount a vigorous defense to the Complaint in a court of law.ā€ A Mississippi State athletic department official declined comment. Ole Miss athletic director Ross Bjork did not return a message seeking comment.

The lawsuit arrived the same week that Ole Miss delivered a 125-page response to the NCAA in an investigation that threatens the future of its football program. According to the notice, Ole Miss has ā€œconcluded that significant violations occurred in connection with its football program over a period of years.

One of the most serious charges in the NCAA case against Ole Miss—an alleged Level 1 violation—revolves around Rebel Rags. The NCAA contends that Miller, Lewis and Jones were guided by a former Ole Miss coach, Chris Kiffin, and a former football staff official, Barney Farrar, who ā€œarranged approximately $2,800 in impermissible recruiting inducements in the form of free merchandise.ā€

The store is identified as ā€œBooster 8ā€ in the NCAA case, ā€œa retailer located in Oxford, Mississippi, that specializes in selling merchandise associated with the institution.ā€ (Yahoo Sports also identified Rebel Rags founder and president, Terry Warren, as ā€œBooster 9.ā€)

The lawsuit reflects the existential risk posed by the NCAA’s notice of allegations for Rebel Rags as a business. The store’s entire business model—selling officially licensed Ole Miss paraphernalia and merchandise—is imperiled by allegations that the store aided Ole Miss in breaking NCAA rules. ā€œPeople have threatened to boycott the store,ā€ Merkel tells SI. Merkel adds that the store president Warren, ā€œhas received hate mail. People are blaming him and the store. He is and was at risk.ā€

Merkel also explains that Rebel Rags is cognizant of the fact that ā€œOle Miss has disassociated with car dealerships and others connected to boosters.ā€ Along those lines, Merkel is concerned that Rebel Rags ā€œcould be disassociated from the school at any time,ā€ a move that would likely put Rebel Rags out of business.

In order to prevail in a defamation lawsuit, Rebel Rags will need to prove that the defendants made relatively specific statements about the store that were factual-sounding. Statements asserting that recruits received free merchandise from Rebel Rags on specific dates and for certain values would, if untrue, likely embody defamatory remarks. In contrast, statements that are more accurately viewed as opinions or subjective depictions are less likely to be viewed by a court as defamatory. A description of a booster’s attitude or motivations would, for instance, probably not count as defamatory since it can’t be proven or disproven.

Lewis has emerged as a divisive figure in the case against Ole Miss. Along with the $400 in gear he allegedly received at Rebel Rags, he also alleges some of the most significant testimony against Ole Miss. Lewis claims he took $10,000 from an Ole Miss booster before National Signing Day in 2015. Ole Miss points out inconsistencies in his story in the response to the NCAA. In one telling, according to the response, Lewis said the booster provided him ā€œa wad of $100 bills.ā€ His story later changed to ā€œa bag full of moneyā€ that he alleged he received in a parking lot. Ole Miss also alleges that Lewis changed his story about who initiated contact with the booster.

Much of Rebel Rags’s lawsuit centers on how the NCAA obtained information from Lewis. More specifically, the lawsuit contends that Lewis embellished and that the NCAA facilitated that embellishment in order to burnish the case against Ole Miss. Along those lines, it is expected that Rebel Rags will argue that neither Ole Miss nor any third party implicated by Lewis’s allegations had a credible opportunity to cross-examine him. Merkel tells SI that Lewis ā€œcouldn’t tell a straight storyā€ when implicating Ole Miss and Rebel Rags. By suing Lewis for defamation, Rebel Rags may gain the opportunity to force Lewis to testify under oath, answer hostile questions and turn over evidence and documentation that might undermine Lewis’s narrative.

One unique aspect of the lawsuit is that Rebel Rags, unlike Ole Miss, can easily commence a lawsuit over an NCAA investigation.

ā€œWe’re not a volunteer member,ā€ Merkel notes, ā€œWe don’t dance to their tune.ā€ The same, of course, is not true for NCAA affiliated schools. Because of their membership agreements with the NCAA and related contractual obligations, NCAA members are greatly limited in being able to sue the NCAA.

Expect Rebel Rags to gradually expand the lawsuit to include other persons as defendants, according to Merkel. As more facts surface, Rebel Rags will likely expand the lawsuit to include those who may have negotiated with the NCAA for immunity from punishment.
 
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