The Daily - Mob Ties and Rigged Bets: Inside the N.B.A.’s Gambling Scandal
Episode Date: October 27, 2025A federal investigation into illegal gambling has rocked the N.B.A. On Thursday, more than 30 people were indicted in the case, which involves the Mafia, high-profile players and the manipulation of p...rofessional basketball games to rig bets.Jonah E. Bromwich and Jenny Vrentas, who have been covering the story, discuss the shocking facts and the growing concern that online betting might be compromising the integrity of the sport.Guest:Jonah E. Bromwich, a New York Times reporter covering criminal justice in the New York region, with an emphasis on federal prosecutors and judges.Jenny Vrentas, a New York Times reporter covering money, power and influence in sports.Background reading: The United States charged an N.B.A. coach and others in gambling schemes.Who was the unnamed “Player 3” in the N.B.A. gambling case?Photo: USA TODAY Sports, via ReutersFor more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From the New York Times, I'm Natalie Ketrow-F.
This is the Daily.
Well, it's the story that rocked the sports world,
a multi-million dollar betting scheme that led to more than 30 arrests,
including current and former NBA players and coaches.
Today, we go inside the federal investigation into a legal gambling that has rocked the NBA.
You know, this is right out of a movie.
You're talking about mob stuff.
talking about cheating of poker games, rigging poker games.
The alleged schemes involve the mafia, high-profile players,
and the manipulation of professional basketball games
to rig and win bets.
I understand betting is legal,
but I don't think it's too much to ask of a player or a coach.
Do not engage in this.
For me, it's all about trust.
People watch this game because they think it's real and fair.
And I'm just ashamed that they put themselves
and put their family and put the NBA in this position.
in this position.
There's all saying in the hood.
All money ain't good money.
I talked to my colleagues,
Jonah Bromwich and Jenny Vrentis,
about the shocking facts of the cases
and the growing concern
that the explosion of online betting
may be compromising
the integrity of the sport.
It's Monday, October 27th.
Jonah, the NBA season started last week.
Tons of storylines there, huge week for the league.
But the biggest story at this moment for the NBA had nothing to do with the games.
It was this massive announcement made by the FBI director, Cash Patel, on Thursday.
So walk me through exactly what he said.
Sure.
So 6.30 in the morning, we get this email.
There's going to be this big announcement.
No one really knows what it is beforehand.
We're getting kind of bits and pieces of it.
But then people go into the room.
Good morning.
And Cash Patel is there, and he starts talking about these two enormously consequential schemes.
Today, we are here in New York to announce a historic arrest across a wide-sweeping criminal enterprise that envelops both the NBA and La Casanoa.
So the first case is the poker case,
and that is about a very complicated mafia-involved scheme
to rig poker games and prominent NBA figures
were used almost as bait to attract the victims to these games.
There is no room for any type of criminal behavior,
be it on the world's largest stage
or in the back rooms of tiny paulers where guard games are being plugged.
And then the second one,
intrudes more closely on the life of the league
because this is one player,
various other co-conspirators,
making bets about what's going to happen in games
based on their relationships inside the locker room.
It's not hundreds of dollars.
It's not thousands of dollars.
It's not tens of thousands of dollars.
And what is immediately clear
in what he's talking about
is that the scope of this is enormous.
We're talking about tens of millions of dollars
in fraud and theft and rights.
And then it hits the league in a place that the league really doesn't want to be hit.
And look, let's not, you know, mince words.
This is the insider trading saga for the NBA.
Okay, let's take these schemes one by one, and we'll start with the illegal-rigged poker games.
How did this work?
Who was there?
What happened?
I want to know everything.
So what I'm about to describe, they haven't been proven.
and I'm largely drawing on indictments from prosecutors.
So defense lawyers have not yet had a say.
It's not clear what they'll argue.
And all of these are just allegations for the moment.
So this is a kind of remarkable story in its own right
because this is a story about pretty high-tech rigging of illegal poker games.
They were held regularly at two locations in New York.
And what would happen is using two NBA fission,
figures as bait, the many, many people involved in this scheme would have victims come to these
games and they would use these advanced shuffling machines that could tell them which of them
had the best hand and coordinate with that knowledge to win this game and defraud victims of their
money. And who's running these poker games? Like, who's everyone behind all this?
So the mafia is largely behind all this. There's four different mafia.
families. There are bananas, the Gambinos, the Genoveses, and the Lucases that are involved in
poker games. And it does bring up this kind of image of Tony Soprano and the games from that show.
But this is really still happening. You know, the mafia still exists in New York. And one of the
things they do, one of the ways they make money, is by getting these operations off the street,
out of the public eye, and at the poker table. Okay. So you have this kind of old world aspect of
this where the mafia is involved. But it sounds like it was kind of high-tech. You mentioned these
advanced shuffling machines, like the mechanism by which the cheating happens. It was pretty
technological. Yeah, and there are a lot of kind of crazy technologies involved in this.
There are all these kind of almost like James Bond like gadgets mixed in with this mafia movie
that we're hearing about. They had decoy cell phones that could detect which cards were on the
table at which time. They had playing cards that had these kind of invisible ink markings that you
had to wear special contact lenses to see. What? And the rigged shuffling machines you mentioned,
it's funny, they're not rigged in the way that they shuffle. What they can do is analyze as they're
dealing a hand the strength of that hand relative to every other hand they've dealt. So the shuffling
is above board, but what happens is that the machine sends a signal to an outside person known as
the operator, the operator then sends that information back into the room to the person they called
the quarterback or the driver, and everyone on the cheating team knows, okay, we're going to coordinate
this knowing who has the best hand here.
Can I ask how much money were these games raking in? I think I'm used to the idea of like a $25
poker night. So just lay out for me, what amount is being stolen in this?
kind of cheating. Like a truly absurd amount, an amount that really kind of makes us curious about
who exactly is playing at these games. So for example, John Doe number one is named in the
indictment. That's the first victim. John Doe number one loses $1.8 million in a single game.
And so overall, we're talking about millions and millions of dollars at these games, which are held
regularly both in the New York locations I mentioned, but also all over the United States, the
indictment says. And you said that the NBA players involved, they were used as a draw for the other
marks that came. They made the games cool. So the implication is that they were getting a cut of the
winnings? Like, were they in business with the mafia? They're directly accused of getting a cut of the
winning. So yes, exactly. They are accused of doing business with the mafia, one of whom is quite well
known to NBA fans, Chauncey Billups, NBA champion, current head coach for the Portland Trailblazers.
And the collection of guys at this table is really fascinating, right?
Because it's mafia members.
And then it's these almost sports betting nerds who love poker.
So just imagine that game.
Imagine the personalities that half the side is cheating.
It's just an extraordinary scene to think about.
Okay.
I want to turn to the other indictment.
Cash Patel called this one insider trading for the NBA.
Is that accurate?
What are we talking about here?
So this is a scheme where.
according to the indictment, a NBA player and co-conspirators traded on information known only to them,
known only to people who would be inside the locker room, and they used it to gamble on games
with an advantage that no one else had. And that's exactly how insider trading works. You have
information that is not available to the public, and you use that information to your financial
advantage. So it's actually a perfect explanation of what happened here.
Tell me a little bit more about how they used it to their advantage, like specifically
in this case, what were they doing? How did they make money? So there are a couple different
ways that they used the information that they had access to. And the first example is, is the most
outrageous and I think maybe the most troubling for the NBA. So the one active NBA player who is a
defendant here is a guy named Terry Rozier. Terry Rozier, he's currently a guard in the Miami Heat,
but in 2023, he was a player for the Charlotte Hornets. And while playing for the Hornets,
told his co-conspirators,
hey, I'm going to go out of this game early with an injury.
And no one knows that I'm going to do that,
including officials on my own team.
So knowing that Rozier was going to go out of this game early
was an enormous advantage.
And it was an advantage because his co-conspirators then bet
that he would score fewer points,
that he would be less productive in this game than he usually was.
And of course, they were right.
Because when he went out early,
there was no chance that he was going to make
up those averages and they were able to win hundreds of thousands of dollars.
So what you're talking about, those bets on how many points he's going to score at a certain
point in the game, those are what's been referred to as prop bets. Can you just break down
what prop bets are? Yeah. So I think when people who do not gamble on sports consider sports
betting when they consider it at all, they might think that the easiest way to do it is you're going
to bet on who wins and who loses. But sports gambling has got to.
and a lot more sophisticated.
And you can bet on all these different kinds of elements of a game,
including an individual player's performance,
an individual player's performance in a certain category,
like points scored, rebounds.
The amount of betting categories has become really vast.
And that's important here because it shows you that just Terry Rozier,
one person on a team of at least 11 basketball players
can actively impact betting,
even if he can't ultimately control the outcome of a game.
And that's what's at issue here, not just with Rozier, right?
The idea is that the information that was being traded was used to manipulate bets on individual events like this?
Yeah, that's exactly right.
And I'll give you another example.
And this one is eyebrow raising not because it involves the kind of obvious flagrant violation that Rozier is accused of,
but because of the name it does involve.
So the other NBA figure involved in this scheme is a guy named Damon Jones.
And in February 2023, he was an unofficial assistant coach for the Los Angeles Lakers.
While he was in that role, he got information that a prominent player, according to the indictment, named Player 3, was not going to play in a game.
Jones then quickly spread that information to his co-conspirators.
They just bet on the Lakers losing that game.
And the description of player three in the indictment perfectly matches LeBron James.
Now, LeBron is not accused of any wrongdoing.
He's not even implicated.
But you can see why this is such a huge problem for the NBA
because even the specter of the possibility that a scheme like this touched on their most marketable star,
the face of their sport for more than a decade, hints at the issues when the integrity of an NBA game begins to be called into question.
Jonah, you've covered really big cases for us, including Trump trials, the Leticia James arraignment.
Where does this rank for you in the pantheon of all of the cases you've been looking at?
How earth-shattering does it feel?
Yeah, in terms of the scale and high-profile nature of what I often cover, it doesn't quite touch those things.
But criminal cases always in some way touch on what's going on in society.
Like, that seems like a silly thing to say,
but it's actually what makes it so interesting.
There's all this legality,
there's all these specifics of these indictments,
but it always touches back with something that's going on
in the broader world.
And I just see that this case,
like the other cases that I've covered,
really speaks to something that's going on in the moment,
in this case, exactly what's going on in sports gambling,
and why it poses such a problem for these leagues in 2025.
Well, Jonah, thank you so much.
Of course, thank you for having me.
After the break, I'll talk to my colleague, Jenny Vrentis, about exactly that,
how the proliferation of sports betting may contribute to scandals like this
and the impact that it's had on our culture.
We'll be right back.
Jenny, we are here to talk to you about the sports betting indictment.
That just seems like it has really huge implications, definitely for the NBA, and maybe for sports in general.
And in many ways, it does seem as though sports betting has proliferated in recent years, especially these prop bets that are central to this indictment.
And this is a question that I think a lot of people have been asking, what effect will it have on the integrity of the game?
You've been covering this world for a very long time. So let me just ask you, do you think that the explosion of online sports betting enabled the criminal conspiracy that was just revealed?
I think it creates conditions in which gambling is more normalized, more part of society, and there are more chances for criminal activity.
obviously these crimes are still in the stage where the people have been accused and the crimes
haven't been adjudicated. But I do think what we're seeing now with the situation is this is
what sports leagues didn't want to happen. This is what fans didn't want to happen. And now that
it's happened, okay, it's one case, but it involves a lot of people. It involves multiple players,
coaches, sharing information on multiple teams, on multiple games. And so I do think it's fair for fans and
anyone who loves sports in the United States to wonder, is this just the tip of the iceberg?
Okay. I want to get to the question that you raise about whether this is possibly way more widespread
than we even know. But just to slow down and pause for a moment, can we walk through exactly
what this embrace of sports betting has looked like from the perspective of the leagues, fans,
and the players themselves.
Absolutely.
It wasn't that long ago
that sports leagues
were opposed
to the legalization
of sports betting
in the United States.
However, in 2018,
when the Supreme Court
overturned a law
that effectively banned
sports betting
in most of the country,
and as a consequence,
there were significant
business opportunities
that came from that
sports leagues
wanted to take advantage of.
So they built
partnerships
with sports books.
You want to make every game interesting.
Step one, open the BEDMGM Sportsbook.
Step two, put some skin in the game.
And step three, showtime.
There are licensing deals.
New arena.
How about a new network?
Welcome to Fanduil Sports Network.
You're home for Clippers Basketball.
There is signage all over stadiums.
Some stadiums have sports books inside of them.
You can even bet on games while they're still being played.
Seriously.
During TV broadcast, there are prompts to bet during the game.
Now you're in the ring with the king of sports books.
You know what to do.
How quickly this has changed in the last seven years is dizzying.
I'm a person that has followed sports, covered sports for a long time.
And even I am surprised by how quickly betting has become embedded into how we consume sports.
Yeah, I should probably at this point come out as a lot.
huge sports fan myself. I've also been shocked at just how much all of this is plastered
everywhere, how unavoidable it is at halftime, at the games, it's everywhere. I think one of the
things I didn't understand, though, was these smaller prop bets and how important they are to
this new infrastructure, to this new industry. Yes, absolutely. The volume and types of bets
has exploded exponentially over the last few years.
And I think as a consequence of that,
you are presenting more opportunities
for individual occurrences in the game
to potentially be manipulated
because it's very hard to fix a game.
You need cooperation of the entire team.
You can't control everything that happens in a game.
But what you can do is you can control
in some level your individual performance
or the outcome of a single period of time
or a single part of your game.
Right.
Like, if you're a pitcher, obviously, you can control the kind of pitch you throw.
If you're a point guard, you can decide who gets the ball at any point.
I'm wondering if you can walk me through the engagement aspect of this.
Like, what does it do to a fan experience and to the overall watching experience if people are betting on each of these individual outcomes?
Right, exactly.
And I think that's a huge piece of this conversation because this is part of the reason that leagues have embraced sports betting because they believe.
that if people are betting on games and during games, that they will watch more games for longer
periods of time. And we've also seen this increase in these bets that come during a game,
sort of keep people watching and keep people interested in a game maybe you would have
no interest in watching otherwise. And that all feeds into fan engagement. The more eyes that
are on games than the price of the media rights deals, which are the largest source of profit for
the NBA and the NFL, that goes up. And so there you see why there has been this push of
more betting opportunities throughout games. Let's talk about the league's economic interests here.
What has embracing sports betting done for their bottom line? Yeah, I mean, sports betting has been
a huge financial boon for sports leagues. I mean, they have partnerships with sports betting operators
that net something around hundreds of millions of dollars a year. They have stakes in these data
companies that sell statistics from sports games to sports books, which are used to create
some of these prop bets, for instance. And so it's become this ecosystem where sports betting is
so embedded in the business interests of the leagues that it would be hard to back out at this
point. They're just totally enmeshed. They're totally enmeshed. Absolutely. To just return to
the conspiracy that has been laid out in this indictment, I can see a world in which
people might look at what's happened and say,
look, actually, the rise of online sports betting,
it allows you to track more easily unusual bets.
And therefore, it's not the rise of online sports betting
that enabled this.
This is just gambling.
And actually, we're in a position
where we can catch this more easily.
But on the other hand, it does seem as though
from what you're saying,
it's just become so much easier to bet on every little tiny thing.
Like, it's hard to imagine finding a bookie back in the day
who's willing to take a bet on whether someone is going to hit a three in the last two minutes of the third quarter.
And so there's a world in which the proliferation itself does pave the way for a scandal like this.
Yeah, I think it's sort of a both things are true situation here.
And that it is true that sports books and sports leagues work with integrity monitors that are catching suspicious betting activity
and that those integrity monitors played a role in spotting this scandal.
But I think the point that you're making, which I think is a true one,
is that when you have this world in which you can bet on so many things
through the course of a game,
so I think you have to consider the fact that there are more chances for manipulation,
and it makes it harder to catch when there are so many more opportunities.
Let's talk about the options for the NBA,
right now, because the incentives are kind of interesting. On the one hand, you can see how they'd be
worried if people start to en masse doubt that what they're seeing on the court is real. On the other
hand, as you've said, this is just a huge business for them. I think the interesting thing is that
game integrity is actually something that all of the stakeholders care about. The sportsbooks
care about it, the leagues care about it, the betters care about it. If fans start to believe that
betting is an influence for players on the court or coaches of teams to start manipulating games,
it really does undercut the trust and the experience that fans have when they watch.
What I do think is a potential landing spot here is for sports leagues to come together and say,
we are going to limit or ban prop bets. However, on the sports book side,
prop bets are a big part of their business. I mean, one estimate that I received would be
be if you limited prop bets, you would potentially be reducing the amount that people bet by
around 20%. That's significant for sports books and their business. And so this could be an area
where you see what is now a shared business interests colliding a little bit. Okay, so we've talked
about the implications for the league, for the fans. I want to ask about the players, because watching
this all unfold, it made me think that, you know, they're at risk from this too. It raises
the possibility that suddenly the players will be under more suspicion, right, that especially if
they aren't doing well, if they're injured or even if they just miss a couple shots, that people
might think they're setting up a bet. Yeah, I think that's a really great question, and I'm glad you
raised it. We've seen that players, you know, they'll get harassing messages from angry betters
who a bet didn't go their way. A lot of players have started to speak out about this. I think there's
another element here too, which is the pressure from people around you to get inside information
from you. And what we saw in the federal indictments is there were several cases in which people
in somebody's entourage or a childhood friend or a trainer was sharing information about the players.
And I think where you could see the pressure being the hardest to navigate is for people who
aren't paid millions of dollars, you know, for college athletes or people in lower tier pro leagues
who might be getting pressure from people for inside information
and maybe the money feels worth it to them.
So I do think there are a lot of consequences for the players
dealing with how much sports gambling
has become part of the sports worlds that they're in.
And I think, you know, they haven't had any input into that.
I mean, this is the world that they're playing in, right?
Right.
This has been totally foisted on them.
And they have to deal with the consequences, it sounds like.
Exactly.
You mentioned this earlier, and I want to just come back to it, how worried are our fans, our experts, are you that this could be more widespread than just this one scandal, you know, that this could be in many different sports?
There's a world in which it sort of seems like you kind of have to be worried about that, wondering whether anything you're watching in any one of these leagues could be manipulated at any moment.
I think it's fair for any of us to ponder that.
And I think once you start to ponder that, then the cracks begin.
Even in just this federal indictment, right, there were multiple teams, multiple games, multiple years, players, coaches.
There were a lot of parts of the NBA affected by this.
And I think it's come up enough times that it is a persistent concern that the leagues are going to have to
confront, and American sports fans are going to have to reckon with more and more.
Well, Jenny, thanks so much.
Thank you for having me.
Since the indictments were announced, the House Committee on Energy and Commerce has requested
a briefing on the scandal from NBA Commissioner Adam Silver by this Friday, October
31st.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you should know today.
On Sunday, Chinese and American officials said they'd agreed to a framework of a trade deal
ahead of a meeting planned between President Trump and China's top leader Xi Jinping later this week.
Trade negotiators for the two sides met in Malaysia,
An official said they discussed a range of issues, including Chinese restrictions on rare earth minerals,
port fees that the U.S. recently slapped on Chinese ships, and an extension of a truce on tariffs.
The details of the framework remain unclear, but Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on ABC
that he expected China to delay global export controls on rare earths,
and that the U.S. threat of imposing 100% tariffs on China would be averted.
And the French police made arrests in the brazen jewelry heist last week at the Louvre,
though the authorities didn't say how many people were taken into custody.
The Paris prosecutor said in a statement that one man was taken into custody at Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris,
as he was trying to leave the country.
It was not immediately clear whether the police had recovered any of the stolen jewelry,
which includes gem-studded royal tiaras, necklaces, and ear.
earrings dating back to the 19th century.
Today's episode was produced by Shannon Lynn, Anna Foley, and Diana Wynne.
It was edited by Brendan Klingenberg, Lexi Diao, and Mike Benoit.
Contains original music by Dan Powell, Alicia E. Toup, and Marion Lazzano,
and was engineered by Alyssa Moxley.
That's it for the daily.
I'm Natalie Kitrawe. See you tomorrow.
