In yet another choreographed tweet, more than 30 Baylor coaches and staff members are sending a message to Baylor administration. This time, they’re taking on the board’s claim that Art Briles knew about a gang rape, but did nothing to report it.

When asked whether the right people were held accountable for the sexual assault scandal at Baylor, members of Baylor’s board of regents told the Dallas Morning News Wednesday that Art Briles knew about a gang rape, and did not report it.

According to the tweet, the incident had been reported to the coach of the alleged victim, who was an athlete at Baylor. The victim's coach also took the incident to Athletic Director Ian McCaw, and it was reported to the university's judicial affairs office, who handled such incidents at the time, before Baylor had a Title IX office.

Briles was told that the incident by the alleged victim's coach nine months after it occurred. He was told that it had already been reported to the Athletic Director and to judicial affairs. Briles told the coach that if the incident had really occurred, the alleged victim should immediately go to police.

Briles followed up, and was told the alleged victim did not want to report the incident as an assault. Briles never met with the alleged victim.

The coach said in a sworn statement obtained by KWTX that Briles “handled the matter honorably and with the serious attention it deserved.”

This information is consistent with what KWTX has been told by Briles' attorney, and those with knowledge of the incident.

KWTX has also been told by multiple people with knowledge of the incident that the incident involved four players. Three of them were no longer at Baylor when Briles learned of the incident, and the other had been suspended for an unrelated violation, and would not play again.

KWTX also learned that when the gang rape incident was presented by Pepper Hamilton to the Baylor Board of Regents, the board was not told that judicial affairs had already been informed about the incident, or that the coach who reported it to Briles approved of the way Briles responded.

More than 20 Baylor coaches and staff members also simultaneously Tweeted in October, with an image of a headline of a KWTX Article about Baylor’s alleged unjust dismissal of junior college transfer Jeremy Faulk, together with the hashtag #truthdontlie.