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			 There was insufficient evidence to charge the 20-year-old 
			sophomore, one of the top U.S. college football players last year 
			after winning the Heisman Trophy, with a violation, concluded 
			retired Florida Supreme Court Justice Major B. Harding, retained by 
			the university to oversee the proceedings. 
 "In sum, the preponderance of the evidence has not shown that you 
			are responsible for any of the charged violations of the Code," 
			Harding wrote in his five-page recommendation.
 
 Winston was not charged criminally in the December 2012 incident, 
			which he has maintained was consensual, after a Florida state 
			attorney last year found insufficient evidence.
 
 Attorney John Clune of Boulder, Colorado, who represents the 
			accuser, said he was "stunned and dismayed by the order."
 
 "It ignores the bulk of the evidence," said Clune, adding he was 
			considering an appeal.
 
			 His client, who no longer attends Florida State, testified at the 
			hearing, he said.
 Winston did not answer questions at the hearing but submitted a 
			lengthy statement in which he provided a graphic account of having 
			sex with the woman in his apartment after they met at a bar near the 
			campus.
 
 "Clune kept lying about us, and we kept telling the truth about 
			them," said David Cornwell, the player's Atlanta attorney, in a 
			Twitter post on Sunday.
 
 Florida State, which has gone undefeated for two seasons under 
			Winston, is preparing to defend its national title next month in the 
			first-ever collegiate football playoffs.
 
 The case has received widespread attention as U.S. universities face 
			scrutiny for their handling of sexual assault allegations, and the 
			National Football League faces criticism for its handling of 
			domestic violence and abuse by its players.
 
            [to top of second column] | 
      
		 
			The U.S. Department of Education's Office of Civil Rights is 
			investigating Florida State under Title IX, which requires colleges 
			receiving federal funds to promptly investigate sexual abuse 
			complaints.
 Citing confidentiality of student disciplinary procedures, Harding 
			declined Sunday to discuss his findings, submitted to the university 
			on Friday.
 
 Florida State President John Thrasher said in a statement that the 
			hearing reviewed more than 1,000 pages of evidence from multiple 
			investigations.
 
 "Moving forward, we remain committed to the principle of due 
			process," he said, calling student safety the school's top priority.
 
 (Reporting by Bill Cotterell; Writing by Letitia Stein; Editing by 
			Colleen Jenkins, Eric Walsh and Christian Plumb)
 
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