The Oklahoman

3 convicted in corruption case

- BY TOM HAYS AND LARRY NEUMEISTER

Three college basketball recruiting insiders were convicted Wednesday for paying families of top prospects.

NEW YORK — An Adidas executive and two other insiders from the highstakes world of college basketball recruiting were convicted Wednesday in a corruption case that prosecutor­s said exposed the underbelly of the sport.

A federal jury in Manhattan found former Adidas executive James Gatto, business manager Christian Dawkins and amateur league director Merl Code guilty of fraud charges.

The trial centered on whether the men's admitted efforts to channel secret payments to the families of top recruits luring them to major basketball programs sponsored by Adidas was criminal. At stake was a fortune in revenue for the basketball programs and potential endorsemen­t deals for the players if they went pro.

Evidence included text messages between the defendants and coaches from top-tier coaches like Bill Self of Kansas and Rick Pitino of Louisville and testimony from the father of prized recruit Brian Bowen Jr. describing how a Louisville assistant handed him an envelope stuffed with cash.

Prosecutor­s claimed the schools were in the dark about the payment schemes, including $100,000 promised to Bowen's family, that are outlawed by the NCAA. They accused the defendants of defrauding universiti­es by tricking them into passing out scholarshi­ps to players who should have been ineligible.

Gatto, Dawkins and Code left court Wednesday without speaking to reporters, though one defense lawyer indicated there would be an appeal. Sentencing was set for March 5.

Two more college basketball corruption trials are set for next year. The defendants include Chuck Person, a former associate head coach at Auburn who played for five NBA teams over 13 seasons, and also former assistant coaches Tony Bland of USC, Emanuel Richardson of Arizona and Lamont Evans of Oklahoma State.

In closing arguments at the first trial, prosecutor Noah Solowiejcz­yk recounted testimony from cooperator­s and wiretap evidence about how the defendants took steps to create false invoices to Adidas, route funds through various bank accounts and convert it to cash for the families.

The behavior "tells you an awful lot about the defendants," the prosecutor said. "It tells you that what they were doing was wrong."

The defendants didn't deny they sought to make the payments. But they argued that was how the recruitmen­t game was played by Adidas, Nike and other sportswear companies - and that talent-hungry coaching staffs knew it.

A lawyer for defendant Dawkins, who was instrument­al in steering Bowen to Louisville, claimed his client thought he was helping the program succeed to the benefit of everyone involved.

"What proof did the government present that Louisville suffered any harm?" attorney Steven Haney said in closing arguments. In Dawkins' mind, "he thought what he was doing was OK."

Defense attorneys sought to convince the jury the text messages and phone records showing Self and Pitino were in touch with the recruitmen­t middlemen aligned with Adidas proved they had to be aware of the payments. They said further proof the schools weren't blind to the schemes was testimony by Brian Bowen Sr. claiming he received $1,300 from Louisville assistant Kenny Johnson and other testimony by a cooperator, former Adidas consultant, Thomas "T.J." Gassnola, that he delivered $40,000 to North Carolina State assistant coach Orlando Early intended for the family of highly-touted point guard Dennis Smith Jr.

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? In this Oct. 18, 2018, file photo, former Adidas executive James Gatto arrives at federal court in New York. Gatto and two co-defendants were convicted Wednesday of committing fraud by paying families of college basketball prospects with cash so the prospects would attend colleges sponsored by Adidas.
[AP PHOTO] In this Oct. 18, 2018, file photo, former Adidas executive James Gatto arrives at federal court in New York. Gatto and two co-defendants were convicted Wednesday of committing fraud by paying families of college basketball prospects with cash so the prospects would attend colleges sponsored by Adidas.

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