After a four-day trial covering a rape case involving former Vanderbilt cornerback Brandon Banks, the jury deliberated for 15 hours before reaching a verdict.

Banks was charged with five counts of aggravated rape and two counts of aggravated sexual battery stemming from the gang-rape of an unconscious woman in a Vanderbilt dorm room on June 23, 2013, according to The Tennessean. The conviction of aggravated rape carries with it a 15-year prison sentence.

Banks was not the only person involved in this disturbing incident. Brandon Vandenburg, Cory Batey and Jaborian McKenzie are the other three men complicit in these actions. Vandenburg and Batey were both previously found guilty and are serving time in prison, while McKenzie has yet to go on trial.

According to the court testimony, the woman involved had dated Vandenburg, a former tight end who signed with the Commodores, a few times after he enrolled at the school. On the night of the incident, the two were drinking at a local bar. The woman says she remembers drinking a blue drink Vandenburg gave her and then waking up about six hours later in a room she did not recognize.

During those six hours, pictures and videos were taken of the rape. Over 40 pictures and three videos, taken on Banks’, Batey’s and Vandenburg’s phones, were discovered by Nashville police detectives.

Per The Tennessean, Banks blamed bullying by his Vanderbilt teammates as the reason for his part in the incident. Banks explained that since his arrival on campus, his teammates harassed him because of his size and called him gay because he did not sleep around.

“When you’re a freshman, it’s called a body count they keep,” Banks said, according to The Tennessean. “When you’re on campus, it’s how many girls can you sleep with.”

Perhaps most concerning in Banks’ testimony was his revelation that the coaching staff, including then-head coach James Franklin, caught wind that something potentially serious had happened over the weekend. The coaches called a meeting and had a simple message for the players.

“That we needed to look out for each other,” Banks explained, “and anchor down.”