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- Nov 3, 2011
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This all-day. We know that car was given to him, **** everyone knows it. The problem is selective prosecution by the NCAA.id agree except for the part about dealer plates.
This all-day. We know that car was given to him, **** everyone knows it. The problem is selective prosecution by the NCAA.id agree except for the part about dealer plates.
Yeah, but not a DEALER car.his bro is a starting back in the NFL, there are no rules that your fam cant buy you a car... I can think of a bunch of Miami instances similar to that. Jarred Payton, Rohan, etc...
his bro is a starting back in the NFL, there are no rules that your fam cant buy you a car... I can think of a bunch of Miami instances similar to that. Jarred Payton, Rohan, etc...
Yeah, but not a DEALER car.
Dealer plates have that D on them, and are more permanent in nature. I know the ones you're talking about that you keep on the car until you get to the insurance company. It sure doesn't sound like that was the case.OK do we know if its actual DEALER plates, OR White dealer paper tags... Post didnt say. I assumed it was white tags, eg, brand new car.
I will post article today. Was hoping a major would run with story. From local paper:By no valid driver's license do you mean he has a learner's permit? Or none at all
Though his brother can buy him pretty much any car he wants I'd say your scenario is spot on. SEC schools and several others can do this crap in the light of day as the ncaa plays deaf and blind to it while focusing on Miami looking to pounce and deliver the blow of death. How many coaches will want to jump into a situation like this? How many players? Yet people act like that bag game is a non factor.I'm sure it was all legit. His $5k pos car was in the shop getting fixed for 2 months so the $40k dealer car was a loaner.
Am i right?
Do (direct) family gifts fall under impermissible benefits?
point is he cannot purchase a car and drive off lot without a driver’s license. Much less with a dealer tag on the back.
if he bought the car with clean (Dalvin’s) cash, he’d have had a temp tag and a DL.
There are two plausible explanations:
1. a dealer let him borrow the car; or,
2. He stole the car off the lot
Understood. Dalvin wouldn’t be a Georgia booster. Hypothetically if he were, it becomes pretty interesting.I got all that.
He's screwed, I know.
I was just questioning the second part of your comment...
And could not have purchased a new car with his brother’s money either.
I didn't know that family money was impermissible, if that is what you were saying.
Even if he was waiting on insurance he couldn’t do so without a drivers license, no?Dealer plates have that D on them, and are more permanent in nature. I know the ones you're talking about that you keep on the car until you get to the insurance company. It sure doesn't sound like that was the case.
He shouldn't be driving any car at all, much less driving one off a lot. Even if it wasn't a dealer car, what dealership wouldn't check a license? If he wasn't buying the car, this should certainly qualify as an impermissible benefit. Besides, who sells a car to a dude with no license? What happens if he kills someone with this car?Even if he was waiting on insurance he couldn’t do so without a drivers license, no?