A former Baylor University administrator sued the school Wednesday, claiming that she was fired for reinstating a football player's scholarship after it was wrongly revoked over unproven sexual assault allegations, ESPN reported, throwing the latest complication into the ongoing controversy over how the university handles sexual assault complaints.

Lyn Wheeler Kinyon, former assistant vice president for student financial aid, filed a federal Title IX lawsuit that says that she reinstated the scholarship in July. She then received complaints about her performance and was fired in November, according to ESPN's Outside The Lines.

She is the most recent former Baylor employee to speak out about how the university has responded to sexual assault claims. In contrast to Kinyon's account, other former employees and sexual assault victims have accused Baylor of being slow to act and obstructive with investigations.

The football player was reportedly not named in Kinyon's lawsuit, but Outside The Lines said the description matches that of former Baylor defensive tackle Jeremy Faulk.

The player "had not committed sexual assault, was wrongfully accused of unspecified misconduct, kicked off the football team, denied his scholarship, housing and meal allowance on May 30, 2016," the lawsuit states, according to ESPN.

Faulk, a defensive lineman who transferred to Baylor from Garden City Community College in Kansas, told ESPN that he was dismissed from the football team after he was accused of an April sexual assault.

The woman told Outside The Lines that Faulk and another player "forced me to do things that I didn't want to do against my own consent."

Kinyon was on the appeal committee that reinstated the scholarship.

No criminal charges were filed. Baylor's Title IX office suspended its investigation into the complaint Oct. 13, under the agreement that Faulk would never seek readmission to Baylor or return to campus, ESPN reported.

Faulk has entered the NFL draft.