Georgia defensive lineman Jamaal Jarrett signed with the Bulldogs out of the 2023 class as a 4-star prospect from the state of North Carolina. According to an extensive report into the Georgia football program by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution this week, Jarrett’s visit to campus as a 16-year-old recruit prior to his signing featured underage drinking with prospective teammates, broken curfew, and an accusation of sexual assault that landed him in an Athens police station.

According to the AJC report, a Georgia official appeared at the hotel where the incident allegedly occurred and spoke with police officers shortly after a 911 dispatcher received a report of sexual assault. That same official also sat with Jarrett at the police station, according to the report.

Jarrett was not charged in the incident, but his legal situation was not resolved until August of 2022 — just shy of a month after he committed to Georgia.

The freshman defensive lineman was also recently caught on his own IG Live video directing racially insensitive remarks at an Asian-American child who announced one of the Atlanta Falcons’ picks in the 2023 NFL Draft. That situation prompted a public apology from Jarrett over a week later wherein he promised to “learn from this mistake and do better.”

The AJC report didn’t focus solely on Jarrett, though.

According to the report, 11 players during Kirby Smart’s tenure as the team’s head coach have remained with the program despite women reporting violent encounters to the police, the university, or both. It also pointed out the exact number of accusations involving Georgia players is hard to determine as cases may result in a confidential campus investigation rather than a police one.

The AJC also recently reported that “dozens of players” during Smart’s tenure have engaged in reckless behavior while driving — with the report specifically referencing street racing and driving under the influence, among other offenses. That report found that players seldom faced significant consequences.

The new report involving allegations of sexual misconduct and Georgia’s supposed handling of those allegations prompted a statement from a University of Georgia spokesperson that said every allegation is met with “swift and appropriate action” when warranted.

“The University of Georgia and athletic association consider any allegation of sexual assault or domestic abuse to be a very serious matter, and we take swift and appropriate action in response to allegations when warranted by law enforcement or internal investigations,” the University said in a statement to the AJC. “This policy is applied universally across our university community to students, student-athletes, staff and personnel. Student-athletes are subject to the exact same disciplinary process as other students, and in addition, face further athletic program disciplinary measures, which can include suspension and dismissal from the team.”

Smart has been the head coach at Georgia for 7 seasons. He holds an 81-15 record and has won back-to-back national championships.