Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Civil lawsuit dismissed against former Texas Tech basketball player Pop Isaacs !

Civil lawsuit dismissed against former Texas Tech basketball player Pop Isaacs

Time:2024-04-25 22:54:30 source:Universal Unfoldings news portal

LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) — A civil lawsuit against former Texas Tech basketball player Pop Isaacs was dismissed this week after he had been alleged in the assault of a 17-year-old girl during the team’s trip to Bahamas in November.

Isaacs’ attorneys said in a statement Wednesday that the parties to the lawsuit had agreed to dismiss “all claims that have, or could have been, alleged as against one another.”

The plaintiffs, the parents of the alleged victim, filed a motion for dismissal Tuesday in a district court in Lubbock County, Texas, where the university is located. The Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, citing the dismissal document, said that motion was signed off later Tuesday by the presiding judge in the case.

Isaacs played in all 34 games for the Red Raiders this season, averaging 15.8 points and 3.5 assists a game. When the lawsuit became public in January, the school said Isaacs remained in “good standing” and could continue playing.

Related information
  • Atalanta beats 10
  • China replaces Germany as UK's biggest import market: ONS
  • Pentagon chief orders U.S. airlines to assist Afghan evacuation
  • Lao PM says China taking concrete actions to deepen global anti
  • Shohei Ohtani has 3 doubles, Landon Knack get 1st victory as Dodgers rout Nationals 11
  • Countries attempting to isolate Russia only hurt themselves: Putin
  • Xi in My Eyes
  • (W.E. Talk) Confrontation in Sino
Recommended content
  • Macron takes part in charity soccer game, showing off sporting prowess
  • China replaces Germany as UK's biggest import market: ONS
  • Reality bites in Asia over NATO push
  • World political party leaders hail CPC's people
  • Ancestry website cataloguing names of Japanese Americans incarcerated during World War II
  • U.S. guilty of coercion diplomacy: FM spokesperson