In Part 3, I examined Sherrone Moore’s individual compliance and ethics violations. That analysis was necessary, but it is not sufficient. No serious compliance professional believes that repeated misconduct by senior leaders occurs in a vacuum. Individual failure almost always reflects institutional weakness.
The University of Michigan did not cause Sherrone Moore’s behavior. But the university, and specifically its athletic department, bears responsibility for the systems, decisions, and omissions that allowed risk to accumulate unchecked. This is where the story becomes most relevant to corporate compliance professionals, because it illustrates how even sophisticated institutions can fail when compliance is subordinated to performance, loyalty, or brand protection.
The First Failure: Allowing Athletics to Override Compliance
The most fundamental breakdown at Michigan is structural. Over multiple years, the athletic department functioned as a semi-autonomous power center, capable of managing crises internally while insulating leadership from meaningful accountability.
This dynamic is visible in how the university handled the Connor Stalions sign-stealing scandal. Despite significant NCAA exposure, the program’s response emphasized competitive harm rather than integrity. Moore’s deletion of text messages and subsequent explanations resulted in suspensions, but not in disqualification from advancement. The compliance function did not appear to have veto power over promotion decisions, even when integrity concerns were documented. For compliance professionals, this is a familiar and dangerous pattern. When business units, or in this case, athletics, are allowed to treat compliance as advisory rather than authoritative, the message is clear: results matter more than rules.
The Second Failure: Deference to Legacy and Power
Michigan Athletics operates under a powerful legacy culture. As multiple commentators have noted, the program has long wrapped itself in mythology around the “Michigan Man,” a tradition that stretches back through Bo Schembechler and is reinforced under Jim Harbaugh. That culture prizes loyalty, continuity, and internal succession.
Sherrone Moore was the embodiment of that narrative. He was Harbaugh’s lieutenant, publicly emotional, and deeply embraced by fans and players. That status created what compliance professionals recognize as halo risk. Decision-makers become reluctant to ask hard questions of leaders who symbolize institutional identity.
This deference matters. When leaders are treated as extensions of the institution itself, compliance red flags are reframed as nuisances rather than warnings. That cultural bias undermines independent oversight and discourages escalation.
The Third Failure: A Flawed Internal Investigation Process
The university did commission an outside law firm, Jenner & Block, to investigate the alleged inappropriate relationship between Moore and a staffer. On paper, that decision reflects best practice. In execution, however, significant weaknesses are evident. According to reporting, the investigation initially stalled because both Moore and the staffer denied the relationship, and investigators lacked corroborating evidence. At that point, the inquiry has paused rather than intensifying scrutiny or implementing interim risk controls.
This is a classic compliance failure. When allegations involve senior leadership and power imbalances, the absence of evidence should prompt heightened diligence, not closure. Effective investigations recognize that fear, loyalty, or dependency may suppress disclosure. Failing to account for those dynamics is not neutrality. It is naïveté.
The Fourth Failure: Continued Reliance on False Statements
Perhaps the most troubling institutional failure is the university’s repeated reliance on Moore’s representations, despite a documented history of dishonesty during investigations. Moore had already deleted records and provided questionable explanations in the NCAA matter. That history should have triggered enhanced skepticism. Instead, the institution accepted his denials at face value until external corroboration forced action. Compliance professionals know that credibility is cumulative. Once an individual has compromised their credibility, future statements must be independently verified.
By failing to apply that standard, Michigan allowed risk to persist until it exploded into a crisis involving law enforcement.
The Fifth Failure: Inadequate Background and Risk Due Diligence
Moore’s elevation to head coach in 2024 represents a textbook failure of due diligence in risk-based promotion. Promotion decisions, especially into roles of extraordinary authority, must include a holistic review of ethics, compliance history, and behavioral risk.
Moore’s record at the time of promotion included:
- NCAA violations tied to record deletion;
- Active involvement in a major compliance scandal; and
- Prior suspensions that were not yet fully served.
Any one of these is enough to disqualify him from coaching at a major university. Taken together, they should have triggered a serious debate in both the UM Athletic Department and the university as a whole about tone at the top and reputational risk.
In the corporate world, promoting an executive with unresolved compliance issues into a CEO role would be viewed as reckless. Michigan did precisely that, likely prioritizing continuity and optics over risk management.
The Sixth Failure: Crisis Management Without Safeguards
One of the most alarming details reported is that Moore was terminated alone, reportedly without HR representation or security present, despite prior knowledge that he was experiencing mental health distress. From a compliance and HR standpoint, this is indefensible. Terminations involving senior leaders, allegations of misconduct, and emotional instability require structured protocols. These protocols exist to protect all parties, including the organization.
The fact that Moore was later taken into custody following an alleged incident underscores how poor crisis execution can escalate harm rather than contain it.
The Seventh Failure: A Pattern Ignored
The Moore matter does not stand alone. As ESPN and Slate documented, Michigan athletics has faced multiple scandals in recent years, including federal indictments of staff, repeated NCAA violations, and internal HR complaints across sports.
Compliance professionals recognize this as a pattern risk. When misconduct appears across functions and time, the issue is no longer individual actors. It is governance. The university’s decision to launch a broad inquiry into the athletic department acknowledges this reality. However, recognition after the fact does not mitigate prior harm.
Compliance Takeaways
For compliance professionals, the Michigan Man case offers sobering lessons about institutional vulnerability:
- Compliance functions must have authority, not just access
- Legacy culture can blind organizations to risk
- Investigations involving power imbalance require heightened rigor
- Prior dishonesty must permanently alter credibility assessments
- Promotion decisions are compliance decisions
- Crisis response must be governed by protocol, not expediency
Most importantly, organizations must resist the temptation to treat success as a substitute for integrity. Winning programs, like high-performing business units, often receive the least scrutiny and pose the greatest risk.
I hope you will join me for my concluding Part 4, where I will translate these posts into concrete lessons for compliance professionals across industries. These lessons are not abstract. They are operational, structural, and urgent.
Resources:
The Terrible Mess at Michigan Football, by Jason Gay, writing in the Wall Street Journal.
Ex-Michigan coach Sherrone Moore charged with home invasion, stalking, breaking—Austin Meek and Sam Jane writing in The Athletic.
Fire Everybody—Alex Kirshner, writing in Slate.
Source: Michigan begins a review of the athletic department, by Dan Wetzel and Pete Thamel, writing for ESPN.