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Cephus attorney: Wisconsin doesn't want football player back

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MADISON (AP) — University of Wisconsin-Madison officials are sending a "clear message" they don't want former Badgers wide receiver Quintez Cephus to return despite his acquittal in a sexual assault case, his attorney said Monday.

Cephus, 21, of Macon, Georgia, was suspended from the football team in August 2018 after being charged with second- and third-degree sexual assault. He was expelled from the university earlier this year for violating its non-academic misconduct code. Cephus applied for readmission Aug. 6, four days after a jury found him not guilty.

Cephus' attorney Stephen Meyer said Monday that discussions with the university have collapsed. University spokeswoman Meredith McGlone said Monday she couldn't comment due to privacy rules.

"They sent us a clear message that they don't want Quintez as a student at the University of Wisconsin this semester," Meyer said. He wouldn't give details about what happened or why he thought the university would not look favorably on the readmission request.

A valuable wide receiver, the 6-foot-1 junior played a combined 23 games in 2016 and 2017. He amassed 501 yards receiving in the 2017 season and led the Badgers with six touchdown catches despite breaking his right leg in November of that year, missing the final five games of the season.

Badgers football coach Paul Chryst said last week that he would love to have Cephus return to the team, if that's what's best for him. Cephus and current Badgers players planned a news conference Monday to plead his case. Players have sent a letter supporting Cephus to UW-Madison Chancellor Rebecca Blank, Meyer said.

"They sent us a clear message that they don't want Quintez as a student at the University of Wisconsin this semester." — Stephen Meyer, Quintez Cephus' attorney

"We're just asking her to do the right thing and listen to what the jury says," Meyer said.

The women testified at trial that Cephus sexually assaulted them on the same night in April 2018 and they were too drunk to consent to sex. Cephus testified that the sex was consensual and was arranged by one of his accusers.

The jury deliberated for just over 30 minutes before arriving at a not-guilty verdict.

Cephus has said since the verdict that his top priority is returning to school and playing football again.