On Friday, it was announced that the investigation into the University of Maryland had concluded, and it was found that the school was at fault for the death of former football player Jordan McNair.

Walter’s Inc., an athletic training consulting firm, conducted the investigation and released the results in a 74-page report on Friday. Dr. Rod Walters, the investigator who oversaw the review, met with the University System of Maryland Board of Regents to discuss the results on Friday morning.

This was the first of two investigations into Maryland. The other is looking into the alleged “toxic” culture that was created in the program under coach D.J. Durkin.

Maryland announced at a press conference that no personnel decisions, which includes Durkin’s job status, will be made until after the second investigation has concluded.

McNair, who was 19, fell ill during a team workout on May 29. He was then hospitalized and died on June 13 due to complications related to the heat stroke and possibly a liver transplant.

The investigation reported that more than an hour passed between the time McNair developed initial symptoms of a heat stroke and when 911 was called for an ambulance.

“There was a failure to identify symptoms and aggressively treat it,” Walters said in Friday’s press conference. “There was a delay in identifying the severity of symptoms.”