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Mel Tucker letter sent to Michigan St. alleges 'new evidence'

Mel Tucker's lawyers sent a 106-page letter that presents "new evidence" to Michigan State's interim president and board of trustees Thursday morning as the administrative hearing tied to the misconduct allegations against the former Spartans football coach began.

The letter, which is from one of Tucker's attorneys and was released widely to the media, says the woman who brought forth the claim against Tucker that led to his firing, sexual assault awareness speaker Brenda Tracy, "appears to have made a career out of misleading and manipulating people."

The letter attempts to detail contradictions in the allegations from Tracy, who filed the formal complaint against Tucker with the school's office of civil rights in December 2022. It says she "manipulated a key witness," "deleted key evidence" and selectively gave transcripts to the Office of Institutional Equity.

Tracy's attorney, Karen Truszkowski, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Truszkowski previously told ESPN that she and Tracy would be appearing at the school's sexual misconduct hearing.

The hearing was completed Thursday, with Tracy answering questions from her lawyer and an administrator. The hearing administrator has 20 days to reach a decision and write a final report.

Michigan State fired Tucker for cause Sept. 27. The next day, Tucker's lawyers sent a note to preserve documentation "in anticipation of litigation." At stake for Tucker beyond the hearing is the $79 million he had remaining on his contract. After initially suspending Tucker without pay pending the hearing, the school fired him, saying he violated the moral turpitude clause and that his admitted actions on a phone call with Tracy brought ridicule on the school.

The letter sent out Thursday was the latest in a tense back-and-forth between Tucker's side and the school, with this letter being sent by attorney Jennifer Z. Belveal. It attempts to catch Tracy in conflicting statements, using dozens of messages between her and her assistant, who is now deceased. It does not say specifically how the messages were obtained.

The letter, in part, alleges that Tracy's motivations for filing the complaint are financial. One of Tucker's lawyers shared what Tucker's team says are partially redacted parts of conversations Tracy had with her former assistant where they discuss her finances and the notion that she would be open to settling her claims with Tucker.

"I'm filing a formal complaint with MSU," Tracy wrote, according to the letter. "... [My lawyer] said after that we can let him know that we want to come to an agreement then it doesn't have to go to a hearing or anything unless he wants it to."

According to the messages provided by Tucker's lawyers, Tracy later added: "Money is my only recourse to make him feel like there is a punishment" and "when they do the money I should make him pay me 10k directly."

The letter criticizes the MSU investigation for failing "to attempt to get fulsome text exchanges" for the Office of Institutional Equity investigation. It alleges the school left out Tracy having good feelings about her experience after Michigan State's spring game.

"Blessings on blessings when you stay the course and do what's right. ... No regrets. My heart is good and so is my conscience[.]"

The messages came before the alleged phone encounter that became one of the focuses of the claim. Tracy said it wasn't consensual, but Tucker has disagreed.

The letter was released minutes after the hearing began Thursday morning. Tucker was not attending the hearing, the letter states, because of a medical condition the letter doesn't disclose.

Information from ESPN's Dan Murphy was used in this report.