Los Angeles Times

3 UCLA players in limbo in China

Chinese authoritie­s have time to get approval for arrest. Ball, Riley and Hill are staying in their hotel and won’t play in opener Friday.

- By Ben Bolch

A legal expert says the shopliftin­g investigat­ion involving the trio could take months.

The three UCLA basketball players questioned over shopliftin­g allegation­s in Hangzhou, China, could face a lengthy legal limbo depending on the actions of authoritie­s handling their case, an expert in Chinese law said Wednesday.

Freshmen LiAngelo Ball, Cody Riley and Jalen Hill have remained in a hotel in Hangzhou to await further developmen­ts in the legal process while their Bruins teammates traveled about 100 miles to Shanghai for the team’s season opener Friday against Georgia Tech, according to a person close to the situation who was not authorized to publicly disclose that informatio­n.

The trio will not play against the Yellow Jackets and could miss additional games. Chinese authoritie­s have up to 37 days before deciding whether to obtain official approval for an arrest, said Margaret K. Lewis, a Seton Hall professor of law specializi­ng in the Chinese legal system.

That doesn’t mean that authoritie­s would necessaril­y take that long in a case that reportedly involves merchandis­e taken from a Louis Vuitton store next to the team hotel.

“This timeline could go very quickly,” Lewis said. “We could have someone say tomorrow, ‘No, the evidence isn’t clear,’ or it could take a long time.”

Lewis said an arrest would trigger an investigat­ion that could last up to two additional months before prosecutor­s decided whether to bring formal charges.

“If formal charges are brought against the basketball players … the conviction rate in China is over 99%,” Lewis said. “What’s important in this early stage is what charges are brought, because once they are brought it becomes an issue of what the sentence will be, not whether they will be found guilty or not.”

A court case probably would be heard before a three-judge panel, Lewis said. Possible punishment for a conviction

would be based on multiple factors, Lewis said, including the value of the merchandis­e, the level of cooperatio­n among the players and whether they had appeared repentant.

“This is Louis Vuitton; it’s not a pack of chewing gum,” Lewis said, “so we can assume this is an object of some value. If we’re dealing with some sunglasses, it’s possible you could have some imprisonme­nt of some sort, but there’s other punishment­s that could be possible including probation. It doesn’t have to be prison; there’s no requiremen­t of that.”

UCLA practiced Wednesday and was scheduled to visit Shanghai Disneyland. The Bruins have been accompanie­d on their trip by an entourage including UCLA Chancellor Gene Block, athletic director Dan Guerrero, cheerleade­rs, mascot Joe Bruin and Pac-12 Commission­er Larry Scott.

LaVar Ball, the father of LiAngelo Ball; his wife, Tina; and their youngest son, LaMelo, are in China. ESPN reported that LaVar Ball canceled a planned meeting with the media over legal concerns regarding LiAngelo.

“He’ll be fine. He’ll be fine,” LaVar Ball later told a reporter. “Everybody making it a big deal. It ain’t that big of a deal.”

Lakers rookie Lonzo Ball, LiAngelo’s brother, said he hadn’t spoken with family members in China.

“I am letting my people over there handle it,” Lonzo said Wednesday morning at a Lakers’ shootaroun­d in Boston. “I am over here taking care of business.”

After the Lakers lost to the Celtics, Lonzo said, “It’s still my little brother, but I’ve got to come out here and play.”

Meanwhile, the players overseas were expected to be formulatin­g a different kind of game plan.

“Their best approach at this moment,” Lewis said, “is getting a qualified, savvy defense lawyer in China.”

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