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NCAA Opens Hearing on University of Miami Violations

Athletic booster Nevin Shapiro claims he provided impermissible benefits to Miami athletes, recruits and coaches for nearly a decade.Athletic booster Nevin Shapiro claims he provided impermissible benefits to Miami athletes, recruits and coaches for nearly a decade.INDIANAPOLIS — The NCAA opened a key hearing in the massive infractions case against the University of Miami on Thursday, with school officials, former coaches and the conference commissioner all on hand to defend the Hurricanes against allegations that could bring severe sanctions in the improper benefits case involving former booster Nevin Shapiro.

University President Donna Shalala and Atlantic Coast Conference Commissioner John Swofford were at the hearing at a hotel in downtown Indianapolis, and they were joined by athletic director Blake James, football coach Al Golden, former assistant coach Clint Hurtt and former basketball coach Frank Haith. Hurtt is now at Louisville and Haith is at Missouri.

All the officials declined comment before the proceedings began and at the first lunch break. The hearing is expected to stretch into at least today and possibly Saturday.

Shapiro’s claims of providing impermissible benefits to Miami athletes, recruits and coaches for nearly a decade are the root of the scandal, but the NCAA has been rocked by allegations that its investigators intimidated witnesses and that they improperly collected information using the subpoena powers of Shapiro’s own attorney in a separate bankruptcy case.

NCAA President Mark Emmert was forced to admit his enforcement staff had botched the investigation, leading to requests by the school so far denied to have the case tossed out. Those arguments were expected to be the focus of this week’s hearing.

The investigation may go down as one of the most complex in NCAA history, even without the organization’s mistakes.

The principal whistleblower is Shapiro, a former booster who’s serving a 20-year sentence in federal prison for masterminding a $930 million Ponzi scheme. Virtually all of the individuals who were named by Shapiro in claims published by Yahoo Sports in August 2011 are no longer at the university, and several people the NCAA wants to talk to have refused to cooperate.

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