Ole Miss is facing plenty of "Level 1" violations, considered "a severe breach of conduct," per the released Notice of Allegations. According to the report, there were 28 allegations against the school.
Related: Stepfather claims Ole Miss's Laremy Tunsil was meeting with "football agents" during fight
Laremy Tunsil's former stepfather has spoken with SI after the released Notice of Allegations included fixing ACT test scores, booster involvement and nearly $15,000 in benefits, and detailed his involvement in the entire takedown of Ole Miss.
Among the allegations that Lindsey Miller, Tunsil's stepfather, released were:
Ole Miss allegedly has a system through boosters to get loans, money and free lodging at hotels around Oxford, Miss, which the Tunsil used over a span of three years.
"In a statement to SI through a lawyer, she said: "[Miller] continued receiving his pension, child support and military benefits. Why he keeps telling people that Ole Miss promised us something or did something wrong is beyond me, and frankly makes me very angry."
He alleges boosters and Ole Miss coaches provided financial assistance for Miller and Tunsil's mother, along with two sons, to move from Florida to Oxford.
Related: It might not matter how good Ole Miss is if the Rebels are handed down this severe punishment
Miller provided text messages, emails and Facebook messages to back up claims of his allegations.
According to the report, "Significant portions of the NCAA's case against Ole Miss reflect information from Miller, as three Level I allegations appear to contain information he provided to the NCAA. The Level I violations the NCAA alleges include the loaner cars that led in part to Tunsil's suspension, accepting $800 from a booster and $2,253 in free lodging at a hotel owned by a booster and a house and condo arranged by boosters."
The report notes Miller is an impartial party, following a suit over an alleged domestic incident between Tunsil and his stepfather. As SI's Pete Thamel notes, the NCAA has a chance to drop the hammer on the SEC squad that has been reported to have had "significant academic fraud, heavy booster involvement and a nationally televised admission of a player taking money."
Ole Miss has already taken away 11 football scholarships, disciplined defensive line coach Chris Kiffin and fellow assistant Maurice Harris, disassociated four boosters, paid a $159,325 fine and placed itself on a three-year probation period, per the report.
We'll find out sometime likely in 2017 what kind of punishment (if any) is handed down to head coach Hugh Freeze and the Rebels.