The Province

Blue Jackets’ Johnson files for bankruptcy

Defenceman ‘led down the wrong path’ after trusting parents to manage fortune

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COLUMBUS, Ohio — Columbus Blue Jackets defenceman Jack Johnson has filed for bankruptcy while earning millions under a $30.5 million contract in his ninth NHL season.

In federal court records, the 27-year-old said his finances have fallen apart under his parents’ management. He said creditors and his financial advisers took advantage of him through fraudulent transactio­ns and predatory lending, pledging his contract earnings as security for unconventi­onal loans that he didn’t authorize and that had exorbitant interest rates.

Johnson filed for bankruptcy Oct. 7, two days before the team began the regular season. Those filings indicated he owed more than $12 million. For estimated assets, he checked the box indicating $1 million to $10 million.

Johnson, who was traded to the Blue Jackets by the Los Angeles Kings in 2012, told The Columbus Dispatch he was led astray by others.

“I’d say I picked the wrong people who led me down the wrong path. I’ve got people in place who are going to fix everything now. It’s something I should have done a long time ago,” said Johnson, who declined to comment further to the newspaper.

As a busy young athlete inexperien­ced in money management, the Indianapol­is native wanted to make his earnings last beyond his profession­al career, and he entrusted his financial affairs to his parents, according to court documents.

The filings blamed his situation on unethical actions by financial advisers and creditors “in a systematic, deliberate and predatory lending and investment scheme whereby they lined their own pockets” at his expense. He said in court documents that problems began in early 2011, when he signed his first big deal — a $30.5 million, seven-year extension — just four years into his career with Los Angeles.

Left with significan­t debts and a number of lawsuits aimed at collecting on loans, he had to file bankruptcy to deal with the costs of litigation, garnishmen­t orders and settlement agreements, the filing said.

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Court filings say NHL defenceman Jack Johnson owes more than $12 million to creditors.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Court filings say NHL defenceman Jack Johnson owes more than $12 million to creditors.

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