The former Missouri tutor-turned-whistleblower who admitted to providing multiple Tigers athletes with improper academic assistance says she intends the release this week "the full list of students, classes, and coordinators on Twitter."

Yolanda Kumar, who says she has been been named in a new notice of allegations related to Mizzou's ongoing NCAA case regarding academic fraud, said in a series of tweets she'll reveal Wednesday evening the details she began "recording and documenting" to protect herself.

Kumar said she would make the release at 6:39 p.m., which translates to 18:39 on a 24-hour clock, an apparent allusion to the University of Missouri's founding in 1839, the Kansas City Star noted.

So...On July 18, 2018 at 1839 I will release the full list of students, classes, and coordinators on TWITTER, poor people's justice site, along side the new allegations. I have nothing to fear. I am tired, I am broke, and FEARLESS. — Yolanda Kumar ☪ (@Muslimgirl1973) July 16, 2018

Kumar, who began the tweets Monday, continued to tweet about the NCAA case through Tuesday.

In response to Kumar's tweets, Missouri released a statement (via ESPN.com) that said university representatives met in June with the NCAA Committee on Infractions:

"On June 13, 2018, the University appeared before the NCAA's Committee on Infractions to review its investigative findings, and the Committee has since added a previously unnamed involved party and given notice of the Committee's allegation to that individual. While the University may not disclose the names of any involved student due to (the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act), we remain confident that this review will reveal that the University, as well as its student-athletes and staff, have shown great integrity in responding to the allegations raised. In order to protect the investigation's integrity and in accordance with NCAA rules relative to ongoing investigations, we are unable to comment further any part of the process until it is completed."

Kumar, who told NCAA compliance officers of the men's and women's athletes she improper assistance over a two-year period, alleged to the Star that she had been "groomed" to give special academic aid to football and men's basketball players.

Only one athlete thus far has been affected significantly by the investigation. Football player A.J. Logan was suspended six games last season.

Kumar was disassociated from the athletic department via a letter in April from AD Jim Sterk that she posted to Twitter.

Asked by ESPN.com to elaborate on her tweets this week, Kumar said she would discuss the investigation and her new allegations only through "a series of tweets."