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The person close to the inquiry said James spent two hours on Dec. 17 in a shed the size of a one-car garage that was filled with coolers and that the player was "caught" sitting down on one. All the coolers were removed, the person said, and James was shut inside.
On Dec. 19, James was taken to an electrical room but the buzz was too loud, so he was taken to a press room where the furniture was removed, the person said.
Craig James called to report the allegations on Dec. 19; a university attorney interviewed him and his son Dec. 20; Leach was questioned Dec. 20 or 21; and trainers, student trainers and the doctor who examined Adam James also were interviewed, the person close to the inquiry said.
Liggett said he has a letter from the doctor who examined James supporting Leach's actions.
"He was not hurt by what happened in the equipment room," the lawyer said. "And Mike did not do anything to worsen the situation, in fact he put him in a safer environment by being inside."
Liggett said Leach did not postpone or blow off a meeting about the inquiry.
"Nope, didn't happen," the Lubbock attorney said. "I've been denying that all day."
He said Leach learned about the specific allegations against him when he talked with the school attorney Dec. 20 or 21, but he was not told of "any rule he broke."
Liggett also denied a voice mail message was left for him demanding an apology by Monday.
"Nobody did that," Liggett said.
Turner said the investigation is being handled by the school president's office, with the assistance of its general counsel and athletic director Gerald Myers.
The NCAA is letting Texas Tech conduct its investigation and has not gotten involved, NCAA spokesman Cameron Schuh said. The Big 12 has no authority to investigate what the conference labeled an "institutional matter," Big 12 spokesman Bob Burda said.
Texas Tech players, speaking to reporters Tuesday for the first time since Leach was suspended, declined to discuss the incident. Cornerback LaRon Moore called Leach "different" but said the coach only wants the best from his players.
"He goes about it an unconventional way," Moore said. "But all he wants to do is push us, and we've talked about it with the coaches. That's just his way of doing it. He tries to push us, tries to make us better and tries to make us men and get the best of our ability out of us."
James was with the team in San Antonio as it prepares for the bowl game.
Asked if it was awkward for James to be around the team, McNeill said, "I hope not."
[Associated Press;
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