The Vanderbilt football player who orchestrated the gang rape of an unconscious woman passed out a box of condoms to his teammates and giggled as they assaulted her for 30 minutes.

Brandon Vandenburg, 23, was found guilty by the jury in Nashville of raping the woman, who he was dating at the time, in his Vanderbilt dorm room three years ago.

It was the conclusion to a trial that has revealed horrifying details of the gang rape that involved Vandenburg and three other football players at the prestigious private Southern university.

Vandenburg, who now faces 15 to 25 years in jail, was taken into custody as soon as the verdicts were read out while his parents began to cry.

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Brandon Vandenburg (pictured in court on Saturday in Nashville) was found guilty by a jury Saturday night

Vandenburg seemed to wipe a tear from his right eye as his attorney presented his closing argument

Vandenburg and former teammate Cory Batey were convicted last year, but the verdicts were thrown out after it was revealed a juror had not disclosed he was a victim of statutory rape.

The retrial comes amid a national uproar over the six-month sentence former Stanford swimmer Brock Turner was given for sexually assaulting an unconscious woman behind a dumpster.

Much like Turner's defense, Vandenburg's attorneys attempted to paint a portrait of a young athlete who was new to campus and immediately succumbed to peer pressure to party and drink.

Vandenburg had met his victim, who was 21 at the time, during a recruiting visit to the campus. They began to date when he arrived at the school in June 2013, just two weeks before the attack.

The victim said on the stand that she was excited to see Vandenburg, then 20 years old, when he met up with her at the popular Tin Roof bar on June 22, 2013.

Her roommate, Lauren Miller, said she was comfortable leaving the victim behind with the football player, who looked excited to see her.

'I knew they’d been hanging out for a little bit so we trusted him,' Miller said on the stand, according to the Tennessean.

The last thing Vandenburg's victim remembers from that night was sipping a blue drink.

She woke up the next day alone in the bottom bunk in his dorm room, covered in bruises.

Vandenburg told her she had gotten drunk and vomited and that he had to take care of her. She said he made her feel guilty.

'He told me that I had gotten sick in his room and he had to clean it up and that it was horrible and that he had to spend the whole night taking care of me,' she said during Vandenburg's first trial last summer.

'I apologized, I was embarrassed.'

They met up the day after the attack and when Vandenburg initiated sex, his victim consented.

That was the last time the woman saw Vandenburg until they were face to face in court.

But Vandenburg continued to text the girl in the days after the attack, as rumors began to swirl around campus about what really happened in his dorm room.

The 23-year-old's family (pictured) appeared emotional as well during the closing argument. Vandenburg then shook his head in disbelief when the jury foreman announced he had been found guilty of aggravated rape

Surveillance footage previously showed Vandenburg carrying the young woman (pictured) out of a car and into the dorm with three other football players

As Vandenburg was wishing her 'sweet dreams' and asking when they were going to cook together, the police showed the victim the horrific footage he and his teammates had taken.

Vandenburg's texts became more frantic as details of the night became more clear.

'I would never let what they're saying happen to you,' he texted the victim three days after the incident.

'Ok great this is such a mess,' he said in another one. 'I'm never helping anyone get home ever.'

Vandenburg at first told police he had approached three of his teammates, Batey, Brandon Banks and Jaborian McKenzie, merely to help him put the girl in his bed.

Surveillance footage previously aired by ABC News showed Vandenburg carrying the young woman out of a car and into his dorm with three other football players.

The video shows Vandenburg and the men dragging the woman out of an elevator and onto the floor, pausing to take photos of her with their cell phones.

Vandenburg claimed they all then left his dorm room. 'I didn't want to sleep in there with a girl who was, like, a mess,' he told police.

But after police revealed they had seen troubling footage, Vandenburg's story changed. His interview was played to the jury for the first time ever last week.

It could not be used in the 2015 trial because it could have implicated Batey during their co-trial.

'She got sexually assaulted right in front of me,' he told police, trying to pin the attack on his three teammates. 'And I didn't do anything. I should've called someone. They deserve to go to jail.'

'I wish I just would have left her out in front of the dorm room on the floor,' he added. 'I should've been an an a******.

But testimony from McKenzie, Vandenburg's roommate, and two of his friends from California, who received video and images during the attack, tell a different tale.

Pictures and footage retrieved from the cell phones belonging to Vandenburg, Banks and Batey documented the horrific gang rape.

McKenzie said Vandenburg and his teammates put the victim facedown on the tile floor of his room.

Vandenburg (pictured left on Saturday) and his former teammate Cory Batey (pictured right in April) have both been found guilty during their re-trials. Batey is scheduled to be sentenced in July

He giggled as he told his teammates to 'squeeze that s***', referring to a water bottle that police said one of the men stuck into her anus.

McKenzie said Batey appeared to have sex with the woman, sticking his penis into her mouth.

He sat on her face and raised a middle finger, someone took a picture.

McKenzie said he told Vandenburg he thought the woman would wake up. Vandenburg slapped the woman to prove that she wouldn't. It left a bruise.

Vandeburg tried to wake up his roommate Mark Prioleau, telling him 'We have this b**** in here' and 'We're gonna f*** her', McKenzie said.

Prioleau, who was in the top bunk, saw the four football players surrounding the unconscious woman lying facedown on their dorm room floor. He turned to face the wall and tried to fall asleep.

He said he never checked on the woman and after the attack was done he went to sleep in a friend's room.

McKenzie said Vandenburg was watching porn on his laptop as his teammates assaulted the girl he had been dating, touching himself and trying to get an erection.

The attack lasted 30 minutes and ended with Batey urinating on the woman, testimony states.

Surveillance footage captured Vandenburg exiting the room to cover the camera with a towel.

McKenzie said he and Banks panicked in the bathroom after the attack and that it was Vandenburg who told them to calm down.

He said Vandenburg flushed condoms down the toilet and told them someone he knew had 'beat a rape case' by doing the same.

THE FOUR FOOTBALL PLAYERS INDICTED IN THE VANDERBILT RAPE CASE Brandon Vandenburg (left) and Cory Batey (right) were both convicted last year but the verdict was thrown out after it was revealed that a juror had not disclosed that he had been a victim of statutory rape. Vandenburg was found guilty again Saturday and now faces a potential jail sentence of up to 25 years. Batey was retried in April and found guilty of aggravated rape and other charges. He is scheduled to be sentenced in July Brandon Banks (left) and Jaborian 'Tip' McKenzie (right) both have yet to face trial. They are not currently scheduled to go to court. McKenzie testified during Vandenburg's retrial and told the prosecutor that the 22-year-old had filmed a video of the victim and had passed around a box of condoms Advertisement

Four Vanderbilt athletes, football players Chris Boyd, Dillon Van Der Wal and DeAndre Woods, and tennis player Michael Retta, all testified they saw the female victim lying naked in the hallway outside Vandenburg's room that night.

Boyd and Woods helped carry the woman to his bed after the attack when Vandenburg asked for help.

Investigators said in the following days Vandenburg searched on his cell phone: 'Can police recover deleted picture messages'.

He then went to California to try and destroy photographs and video of the attack he sent to high school friends Miles Finley and Joseph Quinzio.

Finley said Vandenburg smashed his phone and threw it into a lake.

Quinzio, who also told the jury that Vandenburg called him during the attack, said his friend destroyed his phone and bought him a new one as well as attempted to erase his computer history.

It took jurors just over four hours of deliberation Saturday before finding Vandenburg guilty on multiple counts of aggravated rape and aggravated sexual battery.

Vandenburg was also convicted of one count of unlawful photography.

'He was the one that got (the woman) there for these strangers to do this to her,' Assistant District Attorney General Jan Norman told the court room during the prosecution's closing argument.

'He provided the victim. And he provided the room.'

Batey was retried in April and found guilty of aggravated rape and other charges. He is scheduled to be sentenced in July.

Banks and McKenzie have yet to be tried and are not currently scheduled to go to trial.

Vandenburg wiped a tear from his eye during his attorney's closing argument, footage published by WSMV revealed.

He shook his head in disbelief as the first guilty verdict was read out.

Norman praised the victim, who went on to graduate from Vanderbilt with honors and is now pursuing her doctorate in another state, for her strength after sitting through three years of trials.

'She is one of the strongest people that I know,' Norman said.