Fla. Supreme Court denies NCAA motion for a stay
Posted Oct 27, 2009 5:10 PM
 By BRENT KALLESTAD
(AP)
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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -The NCAA's bid to delay a court order to release its records on academic cheating at Florida State was rejected Tuesday by the Florida Supreme Court.
In a terse one-sentence order, the high court denied the NCAA's emergency motion. However, that decision does not preclude them from considering the merits of the case later.
Attorneys for the NCAA provided the records to a Tallahassee law firm to prepare for release, although they aren't expected to vary much from documents already made public by Florida State University. The school released copies earlier this month from "screen shots" of documents posted on a secure, read-only Web site, but not the originals.
The Associated Press and other media sought immediate release after an appelate court on Oct. 13 upheld an earlier ruling that the documents are public records. A circuit judge last week ordered the NCAA to release the documents by 2 p.m. Wednesday unless it could win a stay.
The AP sued to get the records on the college athletics governing body's plan to strip coaches and athletes of wins in 10 sports.
Longtime football coach Bobby Bowden stands to lose 14 victories that would make it difficult for him to overtake Penn State's Joe Paterno in their race to be major college football's winningest coach. Paterno now leads with 390 victories to 385 for Bowden, who hopes to hang on long enough to reach 400.
"We thought it was an important case to take in the first place and we're certainly happy with every step of the way so far," media attorney Carol Jean LoCicero said Tuesday.
"We feel strongly that our private information should not be subject to public records laws," NCAA spokeswoman Stacey Osburn said Tuesday. "This question still remains under review by the Florida Supreme Court and the NCAA will continue to seek all available remedies to protect this important principle."
The records involve meetings between Florida State officials and the NCAA, which said 61 Seminole athletes, including 25 football players, cheated on an online test in a music history course from the fall of 2006 through summer 2007 or received improper help from staffers who provided them with answers to the exam and typed papers for them.
In response to a question during an October 2008 meeting with the NCAA, former Florida State academic adviser Brenda Monk said one athlete that she helped had an IQ of 60 and that at least one athlete couldn't read.
Florida State, which itself reported the violations to the NCAA, accepted self-imposed penalties including loss of scholarships and player suspensions.
But the NCAA's intent to take away wins and individual records, prompted Florida State University T.K. Wetherell to fight that part of the penalty.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
2009-10-27 17:47:42

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COMMENTS ( 22 )
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Golfpro33
9:34AM Oct 15 2009 
FSU has been cheating for years and the whole staff (students teachers and players knew it)
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SUD96
10:37PM Oct 14 2009 
"... one athlete she was accused of helping cheat had an IQ of 60 and couldn't read the test questions."
How in the hell does someone who can't read and has an IQ of 60 even get into college??? An IQ of 60 is mild retardation! Guess the standards are not too high for atheletes!
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popecash
4:04PM Oct 13 2009 
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charger383magum
11:12PM Aug 28 2009 
NCAA and college sports are both way out of control
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9:42PM Aug 28 2009 
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Dbloomslm
4:49PM Aug 28 2009 
So the NCAA is guilty because members of the FSU staff knowingly helped athletes cheat? Must be a Repub.
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Mr bongo850
2:21PM Aug 8 2009 
look at all the arrest of fsu players since the "cheating" was repported. bobby bowden has definately lost control of this team, and that comes from recruiting thugs who don't belong on a college campus to begin with...that your punishment, stop wasting university money which could be used to keep some layed off teachers, and clean up your program!
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