A new report reveals Georgia was fined and penalized for various minor recruiting violations from 2017-19.

Marc Weiszer of the Athens-Banner Herald obtained an NCAA violations summary showing Georgia football recruits received discounted or free school apparel three times between March 2017 and January 2019. For those violations, the school self-imposed various penalties and the NCAA tacked on a $10,000 fine.

Per Weiszer, Georgia “also reduced its official visits by four for this recruiting cycle, took away three weeks of unofficial visits, reduced its evaluation days by nine this coming spring and three this past fall and stopped recruiting the unnamed recruits involved.” UGA also won’t be recruiting prospects at one of the schools involved for two years. The summary did not identify the recruits or staff members involved and did not specify how many recruits were involved, per Weiszer.

After the violations occurred, recruiting relations coordinator Dacia King was fired in April and director of on-campus recruiting Lukman Abdulai was suspended before resigning with severance pay in June.

The NCAA determined that the violations were Level III, which the NCAA considers to be a minimal recruiting or competitive advantage.

Georgia also reported two other secondary violations in football. One of those violations came when a football staff member retweeted a recruiting service writer’s social media post about a recruit’s verbal commitment to the Bulldogs. The staffer impermissibly added text to the retweet. UGA describes the August 26 retweet as “inadvertent.”

The other football violation reportedly occurred on Oct. 30 when a football player’s photo was posted on a commercial entity’s social media account wearing their product. The player did not know how the photo would be used and was not paid. UGA had the photo removed on the same day it was posted and the player received rules education, per the report.

More details, including other UGA athletics violations, can be found in Weiszer’s full article here.