Looks like there will be an impact after all...
awww.. poor Buffy. My god what a trainwreck up there.
DENVER -- With national signing day looming, a recruit has decided against attending Colorado in part because of allegations the school used sex parties to land players.
A recently ousted player also has been arrested for allegedly molesting a fellow student.
Tavita Thompson, a 6-foot-6 lineman from Honolulu who had said he was leaning toward Colorado, has decided instead to sign with Oregon State, university officials said.
Thompson told the Boulder Daily Camera he was concerned the scandal could result in changes in Colorado's coaching staff, though he was reassured by the staff it would have no affect.
Thompson also said relatives in Oregon and its Pacific 10 Conference membership were the deciding factors. A message left at his home Tuesday was not immediately returned.
Colorado athletics spokesman Dave Plati declined comment until Wednesday, when universities can officially sign their recruits to scholarships.
Meanwhile, Boulder police said former Colorado quarterback James Colt Brennan, 20, was arrested Monday by university police on charges including unlawful sexual contact for allegedly entering a female student's dormitory room and exposing himself. Brennan was cut from the team last week after he was accused of sexual misconduct.
Campus police did not immediately return a telephone message.
The university was plunged into scandal last week after the sex party allegations surfaced in a deposition given by Boulder County District Attorney Mary Keenan.
Football coach Gary Barnett and university administrators have denied encouraging such activities. At least two university investigations are under way and Colorado president Elizabeth Hoffman this week said she was forming an independent panel to look into the allegations.
The university's Board of Regents will also meet Friday to discuss the scandal sparked by civil lawsuits in which three women say they were raped at or following a December 2001 football recruiting party. In a deposition for one of the lawsuits, Keenan said recruits were led to believe they would have sex with women at the parties -- and that the university ignored her demands to crack down.
Gov. Bill Owens has told the university to clean up its act.