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<blockquote data-quote="Northeast Stinger" data-source="post: 952265" data-attributes="member: 1640"><p>Spitballing time.</p><p></p><p>In the case of the family lawsuit against uga, for the kind of settlement I think they are going for, you have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that uga knew about the chronic problem of staff and player trips, excessive speeding as a pattern, and little effort, other than keeping everyone’s record clean, given to solving the problem.</p><p></p><p>To get this info you would have to get “inside,” who was talking to who, what was discussed, and who signed off on the policy. Our man who just resigned is probably the key to getting inside.</p><p></p><p>Now bear with me. If the Georgia State House were less ineffective, and more interested in overseeing the public good, a state representative could easily find out what the severance agreement was and whether there were any “legal” conditions on it. This is not private personnel business when it involves a state entity and a possible felony offense. UGA perhaps does not want to go down that path and is trying to separate from the problem.</p><p></p><p>The challenge is, very few elected officials would want to end their political career by being the official who took down dawg nation. Thus, if uga is lucky, this remains a private personnel issue.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Northeast Stinger, post: 952265, member: 1640"] Spitballing time. In the case of the family lawsuit against uga, for the kind of settlement I think they are going for, you have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that uga knew about the chronic problem of staff and player trips, excessive speeding as a pattern, and little effort, other than keeping everyone’s record clean, given to solving the problem. To get this info you would have to get “inside,” who was talking to who, what was discussed, and who signed off on the policy. Our man who just resigned is probably the key to getting inside. Now bear with me. If the Georgia State House were less ineffective, and more interested in overseeing the public good, a state representative could easily find out what the severance agreement was and whether there were any “legal” conditions on it. This is not private personnel business when it involves a state entity and a possible felony offense. UGA perhaps does not want to go down that path and is trying to separate from the problem. The challenge is, very few elected officials would want to end their political career by being the official who took down dawg nation. Thus, if uga is lucky, this remains a private personnel issue. [/QUOTE]
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