Current:Home > Invest2 more charged in betting scandal that spurred NBA to bar Raptors’ Jontay Porter for life -Nova Finance Academy
2 more charged in betting scandal that spurred NBA to bar Raptors’ Jontay Porter for life
View
Date:2025-04-14 09:46:06
NEW YORK (AP) — Two more men were charged Thursday in the sports betting scandal that prompted the NBA to ban former Toronto Raptors player Jontay Porter for life.
Timothy McCormack and Mahmud Mollah now join two other men — Long Phi Pham and a fourth whose name remains redacted in a court complaint — as defendants in a federal wire fraud case about wagers allegedly based on tips from a player about his plans to exit two games early.
Prosecutors haven’t publicly named Porter in connection with the case, but game dates and other details about the “Player 1” mentioned in the court documents match up with Porter and his April banishment from the NBA. Brooklyn federal prosecutors have declined to comment on whether the former forward is under investigation.
Current contact information could not immediately be found for Porter or any agent or other representative he may have.
An NBA investigation found in April that he tipped off bettors about his health and then claimed illness to exit at least one game and make some wagers succeed. Porter also gambled on NBA games in which he didn’t play, once betting against his own team, the league said.
Prosecutors say McCormack, Mollah, Pham and the as-yet-unknown fourth defendant took part in a scheme to get “Player 1” to take himself off the court so that they could win bets against his performance.
And win they did, with Mollah’s bets on a March 20 game netting over $1.3 million, according to the complaint. It said Pham, the player and the unnamed defendant were each supposed to get about a quarter of those winnings, and McCormack a 4% cut, before a betting company got suspicious and blocked Mollah from collecting most of the money.
McCormack also cleared more than $33,000 on a bet on a Jan. 26 game, the complaint said.
His attorney, Jeffrey Chartier, said Thursday that “no case is a slam-dunk.” He declined to comment on whether his client knows Porter.
Lawyers for Mollah and Pham have declined to comment on the allegations.
McCormack, 36, of New York, and Mollah, 24, of Lansdale, Pennsylvania, were granted $50,000 bond each after their arraignments Thursday. A judge agreed Wednesday to release Pham to home detention and electronic monitoring on $750,000 bond. The 38-year-old Brooklyn resident, who also uses the first name Bruce, remained in custody Thursday as paperwork and other details were finalized.
According to the complaint, “Player 1” amassed significant gambling debts by the beginning of 2024, and the unnamed defendant prodded him to clear his obligations by doing a “special” — their code for leaving certain games early to ensure the success of bets that he’d underperform expectations.
“If I don’t do a special with your terms. Then it’s up. And u hate me and if I don’t get u 8k by Friday you’re coming to Toronto to beat me up,” the player said in an encrypted message, according to the complaint.
It says he went on to tell the defendants that he planned to take himself out of the Jan. 26 game early, claiming injury.
Porter played 4 minutes and 24 seconds against the Los Angeles Clippers in that game before saying he had aggravated an eye problem. He’d scored no points, 3 rebounds and 1 assist, below what sportsbooks were expecting. That meant a payday for anyone who bet the “under.”
Then, the complaint said, the player told the defendants that he would exit the March 20 game by saying he was sick. Porter played 2 minutes and 43 seconds against the Sacramento Kings that day, finishing with no points or assists and 2 rebounds, again short of the betting line.
After the NBA and others began investigating, the player warned Pham, Mollah and the unnamed defendant via an encrypted messaging app that they “might just get hit w a rico” — an apparent reference to the common acronym for a federal racketeering charge — and asked whether they had deleted “all the stuff” from their phones, according to the complaint.
NBA players, coaches, referees and other team personnel are prohibited from betting on any of the league’s games or on events such as draft picks.
In banning Porter, NBA Commissioner Adam Silver called the forward’s actions “blatant.”
veryGood! (75267)
Related
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Larry Bird makes rare public speaking appearances during NBA All-Star Weekend
- The cost of U.S. citizenship is about to rise
- 2024 BAFTA Film Awards: See Every Star on the Red Carpet
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- Jaromir Jagr’s return to Pittsburgh ends with his No. 68 being retired — and catharsis
- Sylvester Stallone hired Navy SEALs to train daughters before they moved to New York City
- A suspended Pennsylvania judge charged with shooting her ex-boyfriend as he slept
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Colorado university mourns loss of two people found fatally shot in dorm; investigation ongoing
Ranking
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Alexey Navalny's message to the world if they decide to kill me, and what his wife wants people to do now
- Major New England airports to make tens of millions of dollars in improvements
- All the Candid 2024 People's Choice Awards Moments You Didn't See on TV
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- A Florida woman is missing in Spain after bizarre occurrences. Her loved ones want answers
- European Space Agency predicts when dead satellite likely to return to Earth
- 'Bob Marley: One Love' overperforms at No. 1, while 'Madame Web' bombs at box office
Recommendation
'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
Book excerpt: True North by Andrew J. Graff
What is Presidents Day and how is it celebrated? What to know about the federal holiday
Powerball winning numbers for Feb. 17 drawing: Jackpot worth over $300 million
Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
'Oppenheimer' wins best picture at 2024 BAFTA Awards, the British equivalent of Oscars
California again braces for flooding as another wet winter storm hits the state
'True Detective' finale reveals the forces that killed those naked, frozen scientists