As far as I am concerned, the student does have a point. University already knew there were issues with the tennis coach, but they let the student stay, continue to pay tuition, go to classes and get credits. The coach was dismissed by the University, and University had to know that the student didn't play tennis, but they let him stay and study. As far as we know, he wasn't cheating while in school, and got the credits fair and square. Now they plan to nullify all the credits he got, not allow him to transfer credits to other schools, and they kicked him out without following their own procedures for kicking someone out (they claim because they are kicking him out because of what happened during his admission, and not because of what he did while in school so these procedures don't apply). However I am not a lawyer, so don't know if lawsuit has any merit.