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Ante upped: UNC's Marvin Austin subpoenaed

North Carolina defensive lineman Marvin Austin has had, shall we say, a rather interesting last couple of months.  From being at the heart of an NCAA investigation into illicit player-agents to a suspension for the season opener, Austin has created more news off the field than, even as outstanding a player as he is, he created on it.

Unfortunately for Austin, his summer has just gotten a whole helluva lot more interesting.  And serious.

Citing a person familiar with the situation, the Associated Press is reporting that Austin has been subpoenaed by the North Carolina Secretary of State’s office.  It was reported back in July that Secretary of State Elaine Marshall‘s office had launched an investigation into whether there has been any improper contact between agents and players, and whether any state sports agent laws have been broken.

A spokesman for the office would not confirm the subpoena, only that there’s “an active, ongoing inquiry at this time.”

The affect of the subpoena has the potential to be far reaching according to an unnamed NFL agent CFT spoke to this evening.  Austin could now be compelled to answer questions under fear of perjury or produce documents related to the investigation.  If he were to lie to investigators, for instance, he could find himself facing jail time.  If he tells the truth, and agents or their minions are involved in doling out impermissible benefits, they could be facing jail time  – up to 15 months, in fact — for fracturing state laws. 

In other words, the State of North Carolina has upped the stakes significantly with this latest move, and are clearly out to uncover any and all wrongdoing.

At the center of a controversy that’s now nearly two months old are trips taken by several players at different schools to South Beach, and whether any illegal benefits — airfare, hotel accommodations, etc. — were given to players by agents or their associates.  Alabama’s Marcel Dareus has already received a two-game suspension as a result of the investigation and is required to pay back nearly $1,800 for the illegal benefits he received, while two other players central to the probe — Austin and South Carolina’s Weslye Saundershave been suspended for the opener for issues unrelated to the NCAA issues.

A total of 12 Tar Heels players will definitely miss UNC’s opener Saturday as a result of the agent inquiry and a subsequent academic — six have been suspended outright, while another six are being held out as a precaution.  Additionally, three other players did not make the trip to Atlanta as the school attempts to sort out their eligibility.

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Respond to “Ante upped: UNC's Marvin Austin subpoenaed”
  1. 78Lion says: Sep 3, 2010 11:43 PM

    Good. Hope the idiot tells the truth and the State doesn’t use it just for political capital. Make arrests, then convictions, then prison sentences. Send a message.

  2. brasho says: Sep 4, 2010 7:47 AM

    “Austin has created more news off the field than, even as outstanding a player as he is, he created on it.”
    I take it you have never watched Austin play. Marvin Austin is perhaps the most overrated DT in a very long time. Never have I seen a player that has done so little, put out such terrible tape and performances, gotten so many accolades.
    I watched Austin with great interest last season as I was thinking he was coming out for the NFL draft and he was being touted as a 1st-2nd rounder. He was constantly pushed 5-7 yards off the ball, got very little penetration, no push when rushing the passer, and didn’t produce despite playing along side several other (better) prospects along the DL.
    If a team was dumb enough to seriously consider drafting Austin this past season in the first 2 rounds, then Austin made a huge mistake coming back. I figured he would be exposed as the horribly unproductive player that he is, now he won’t get that opportunity… perhaps him missing will be to his benefit.

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