U.S.
charges NCAA basketball coaches with bribery, fraud
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[September 27, 2017]
By Brendan Pierson and Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. authorities
on Tuesday unveiled fraud charges against 10 people associated with
some of the country's premier college basketball programs, including
four coaches and an Adidas AG executive, following a two-year
corruption probe.
Prosecutors said they uncovered two related schemes, including one
in which apparel executives, financial advisers and others bribed
assistant college coaches to steer elite players to them, and a
second in which players were allegedly bribed to enroll at schools
sponsored by Adidas.
The charges reflect what prosecutors called the "criminal influence
of money" on National Collegiate Athletic Association basketball,
and the conflicts that could arise from the drive to win and the
need to provide student-athletes an education.
"College sports has a history of corruption, but the involvement of
coaches is particularly troubling," said Mark Conrad, a sports law
and ethics professor at Fordham University's Gabelli School of
Business. "It raises questions about the priorities of the so-called
'power' schools."
Among those charged was Chuck Person, a former National Basketball
Association star who became associate head coach at Auburn
University, his alma mater.
The other coaches charged are Anthony "Tony" Bland, from the
University of Southern California; Lamont Evans, from Oklahoma State
University and formerly the University of South Carolina; and
Emanuel "Book" Richardson, from the University of Arizona.
"We have no tolerance whatsoever for this alleged behavior," NCAA
President Mark Emmert said in a statement. "Coaches hold a unique
position of trust with student-athletes and their families and these
bribery allegations, if true, suggest an extraordinary and
despicable breach of that trust."
Person, Evans and Richardson were suspended by their respective
universities, while USC said it put Bland on leave and hired former
FBI Director Louis Freeh to conduct an internal probe.
"CONTEMPT"
Among those also charged were James Gatto, director for global
sports marketing for basketball at Adidas; Rashan Michel, who runs
an Atlanta apparel company; New Jersey money manager Munish Sood;
and Christian Dawkins, a former ASM Sports agent who prosecutors
said was fired in May.
Prosecutors said Gatto and others funneled $100,000 from Adidas,
identified as "Company-1," to the family of an elite high school
prospect so he would play at an Adidas-sponsored school matching the
description of the University of Louisville.
The player was also expected to sign with Adidas upon turning
professional, prosecutors said.
Joon Kim, the acting U.S. attorney in Manhattan, told a press
conference the defendants showed "contempt" for players and coaches
who follow the rules.
Adidas said in an email it was "unaware of any misconduct and would
fully cooperate with authorities to understand more."
[to top of second column] |
Joon H. Kim, the Acting United States Attorney for the Southern
District of New York, speaks during a news conference to announce
charges against 10 people, including four college basketball coaches
and financial advisers, with bribery and fraud in connection with
college recruiting in New York, U.S., September 26, 2017.
REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
Jeff Duffey, a lawyer for Person, declined to comment. The firm
matching the description in court papers of Sood's firm had no
immediate comment. Other defendants' lawyers declined to comment or
could not be identified.
PLAYING BY THE RULES
Person, 53, was a two-time All-American at Auburn and became its
all-time scoring leader. He later played for the Indiana Pacers and
other teams in a 13-year NBA career.
Prosecutors said Person accepted $91,500 of bribes over 10 months
from a financial adviser, who was secretly cooperating with
prosecutors, in exchange for steering NBA-worthy Auburn players to
hire the adviser and buy suits from Michel.
They said Person also claimed to pay $18,500 of that sum to two
players' families.
Court papers describe a secretly recorded meeting at a Manhattan
hotel last December where Person told an Auburn player that he knew
some of his help was "a violation ... of rules, but this is how the
NBA players get it done, they get early relationships, and they form
partnerships, they form trust."
Auburn President Steven Leath said on Twitter the school was
"saddened, angry and disappointed" by the news.
"We are committed to playing by the rules, and that's what we expect
from our coaches," he said.
Louisville's interim president, Gregory Postel, USC Athletic
Director Lynn Swann, Arizona and South Carolina said their
respective schools would cooperate with authorities.
Paul Haagen, co-director of Duke University's Center for Sports Law
and Policy, said the charges reflect pressure on coaches to recruit
players, and on apparel companies to sign up future stars like
Michael Jordan, the NBA Hall of Famer long associated with Nike Inc.
"Everyone wants to be making money," Haagen said. "The main
significance is whether this probe involves just these charges, or
turns into a much bigger investigation. It has the indicia of being
much larger."
(Reporting By Brendan Pierson and Jonathan Stempel in New York;
Editing by Dan Grebler and Richard Chang)
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