bugeater17
Well-known member
I think I know what you are implying but how can he do this legitimately? He's a college student and I don't think his family is wealthy. These are questions the NCAA might ask. I've been thinking of ways for Mo to get money to pay for an attorney. It makes sense that someone might loan him say $50K if Mo agrees to pay back $100K when he turns pro, so the "collateral" he's putting up is pro potential. I don't think that somebody can be associated with UNL in any way without running afoul of some NCAA rule. A CA attorney that is a Nebraska alum willing to handle the case pro bono would probably be considered an impermissible benefit. Would the NCAA allow Mo to set up a GoFundMe for his defense? I have no idea how a normal person goes about getting money to pay for defending themselves against a criminal charge but it seems like being a NCAA athlete could restrict the possibilities.
I dont know how difficult of a case this really is and dont know that a lawyer would charge him 50k. If in the case of the pro bono being an impermissible benefit a lawyer could take a much lower fee. They could just take the amount he paid for bail and call it a day
4skers89 raises valid points. Even an attorney lowering a fee would be an impermissible benefit. It really puts a person in Mo's situation in bad situation and I would argue violates his right to a fair trial and to defend himself.