— Again this spring, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is considering a response to the latest Notice of Allegations from the NCAA outlining violations connected to the school's long-running academic fraud scandal.

The document, posted by the university Monday afternoon, is an amended version of five violations, including "lack of institutional control" linked to the years of no-show classes within the university's then-Department of African and African-American Studies. All five allegations were deemed to be Level I -- the most severe.

The amended version of the allegations by the NCAA do not reference football, men's basketball or women's soccer -- all of which were mentioned multiple times in the original drafting. Women's basketball is referenced multiple times.

The updated allegations name three people:

Jan Boxill, former faculty chairwoman, an ethics professor and the former athletic-academic counselor for the women's basketball team;

Julius Nyang’oro, retired professor and head of the AFAM department and;

Deborah Crowder, Nyang’oro's long-time assistant whose efforts to aid students athletes by pushing for better grades and pointing them to no-show classes were detailed in the 2014 Wainstein Report.

No current coaches at UNC were named in the allegations.

"It's unfortunate that women's basketball is singled out," said academic adviser Mary Willingham, who had her research privileges suspended after she claimed student-athletes she worked with were doing work on the same level of her own elementary school- and middle school-age children. "UNC and the NCAA are colluding to protect the profit sports, Why would we expect anything else? It's a cartel."

The NCAA claims UNC failed to monitor activities of academic counselors and AFAM department faculty, demonstrating a lack of institutional control. The NCAA alleges that "persons of authority condoned, participated in or negligently disregarded the violation of related wrongful conduct."

Boxill was found to have committed 18 different violations of the NCAA extra benefits bylaws. Allegations include providing papers for grades, providing annotated bibliographies, providing completed quizzes and requesting specific grades.

According to the NCAA, Boxill's infractions "serves as part of the basis for the lack of institutional control."

Attorney Randall Roden issued a statement on behalf of Boxill Monday evening, saying that the allegations against her are incorrect and based on email conversations that were taken out of context. When testifying before the NCAA, Boxill said she did not know anything about fake classes, nor did anybody connected to the women's basketball team, Roden said.

"The work that she did with her students (few of whom were athletes) was for their education and academic success. Dr. Boxill treated all of her students the same. She wanted them to be well educated college graduates and dedicated 30 years of her life to making that happen," Roden's statement said.

Crowder and Nyang’oro each drew one allegation for their failure to cooperate with the NCAA on their investigation.

The university has 90 days to prepare a response to Monday's document.

In a question-and-answer session with the media Monday afternoon, Director of Athletics Bubba Cunningham said it's likely the university would use all of that time.

He emphasized that the allegations rolled out this week were the result of a "joint investigation" between the university and the NCAA.

“The university takes these allegations extremely seriously," Cunningham said "We're working as hard as we can to secure a fair outcome for Carolina."

Sports radio host Joe Ovies said that a resolution to the scandal may still have not been reached by time the 2017 NCAA championship games roll around, noting it all boils down to what the NCAA can prove.

"The issue is that the NCAA is in the business of proving what they can and, unfortunately for women's basketball, they've left a lot out there for the NCAA to pick up on and make their case," he said.

Football players' flash first attracts NCAA attention

The NCAA first began investigating Tar Heels athletic programs in the summer of 2010 on reports that football players were accepting money and gifts from agents and their representatives, in violation of amateurism rules.

It took almost two years for the NCAA to find academic improprieties, student-agent dealings and the acceptance of improper benefits and to punish the UNC football program with a bowl ban, a reduction in scholarships and a removal of 16 wins from the record books.

Wainstein report finds 'paper classes' went on for years

The university, prompted by revelations during that investigation about student-athletes who got help with papers and classes that never met, conducted several reviews of the then-Department of African and Afro-American Studies, eventually hiring Kenneth Wainstein, who worked in the U.S. Attorney General's Office, with a mandate to report on academic improprieties dating back to the early 1990s.

Wainstein found 169 student-athletes over the course of 18 years who benefited from classes that never met or had grades manipulated to keep them eligible.

Last summer, the NCAA's 59-page Notice of Allegations accused UNC of five violations of NCAA bylaws, including lack of institutional control for providing benefits to student-athletes not available to the student body.

New findings delay potential punishment

UNC had 90 days to respond, but that process paused in August when the school reported additional information to the NCAA for review.

The latest Notice of Allegations would include those five violations plus "improper academic assistance" provided to women's basketball players and potential recruiting violations in the men's soccer program.

Timeline: Six years of questions about academics, athletics

July 12-13, 2010

NCAA conducts first on-campus interviews of football players after suspicions arise from social media posts by players a month earlier.

August 26, 2010

UNC announces that the investigation has expanded to suspicious academic misconduct involving academic/athletic tutor Jenifer Wiley. A day later, the school self-reports academic infractions to the NCAA.

September 3, 2010

UNC declares six football players ineligible for the first game against LSU (played in the Georgia Dome in Atlanta): Marvin Austin, cornerback Charles Brown, cornerback Kendric Burney, Greg Little, defensive end Michael McAdoo and defensive end Richard Quinn.

Seven more players did not make the season opening trip to Atlanta to face LSU while their eligibility was in question: running back Shaun Draughn, defensive end Linwan Euwell, safety Brian Gupton, running back Ryan Houston, safety Da’Norris Searcy, safety Jonathan Smith and safety Deunta Williams.

Two players were initially left behind but were later allowed to travel and play: linebackers Quan Sturdivant and Bruce Carter.

Marvin Austin is subpoenaed by the state to discuss agent interactions. It is reported that agents Gary Wichard, Peter Schaffer and Drew Rosenhaus are questioned by the state.

In all, 12 Tar Heel football players miss the first game of the season: (12) Marvin Austin, Greg Little, Robert Quinn, Jonathan Smith, Brian Gupton, Michael McAdoo, Charles Brown, Kendric Burney, Shaun Draughn, Da’Norris Searcy, Ryan Houston and Linwan Euwell

March 3, 2011

Senate Bill 224 is filed proposing strict guidelines for sports agents and their relationships with athletes in the state of North Carolina. 19 senators sponsor the Bill, 10 have at least one degree from UNC.

June 7, 2011

UNC is issued a formal Notice of Inquiry from the NCAA opening the doors for the NCAA to move forward with a notice of allegations.

July 27, 2011

UNC fires head football coach Butch Davis. Everett Withers replaces him as interim head coach. In the coming weeks, Director of Athletics Dick Baddour announces his retirement. A search committee identifies Bubba Cunningham as his successor.

Sept. 1, 2013

Julius Nyang'oro, the head of the then-Department of African and African-American Studies (AFAM), resigns his position amid pressures from academic scandal involving football players.

March 1, 2013

The NC State Bureau of Investigation announces they have uncovered more information related to the UNC academic scandal and say they will continue to gather details.

Nov. 19, 2013

Four agents and acting agents are sent disassociation letters from UNC after being indicted for violating the athlete-agent law. Georgia-based Terry Watson headlines the group that also includes former NC Central quarterback Michael Johnson, real estate agent Patrick Jones and Miami-based Willie Barley.

Jan. 16, 2014

UNC suspends research privileges for Mary Willingham, an academic adviser who claimed

student-athletes she worked with were doing work on the same level of her own elementary school- and middle school-age children.

June 30, 2014

The NCAA reopens investigation into possible academic fraud at UNC

Oct. 22, 2014

Nine UNC faculty members are disciplined as a result of the Wainstein Report that cited numerous counts of academic fraud in the AFAM Department.

May 12, 2015

Former UNC defensive back Chris Hawkins is arrested under the NC Sports Agent Law after acting as an agent for Tar Heels players without a license

June 4, 2015

NCAA hands UNC a second Notice of Allegations, this one focused on academic issues revealed by the Wainstein Report. It includes five allegations, including lack of institutional control.