The Herald Sun (Sunday)

Youth basketball coach pleads guilty to charity fraud scheme

- BY ANNA JOHNSON ajohnson@newsobserv­er.com

A major player in the Triangle youth basketball scene has pleaded guilty in a nearly $600,000 charity fraud scheme.

Dwayne Moorer West, 60, of Fuquay-Varina, faces up to 20 years in prison for “devising and executing a scheme” to defraud a company by obtaining matching charitable contributi­ons to a nonprofit he owned.

West is the brother of former NBA player David West and ran the Garner Road Basketball Club as its executive director from 2000-19. He was previously named one of The News & Observer’s 10 most influentia­l people in Triangle sports and was inducted into the North Carolina Amateur Athletic Union Hall of Fame. Around 200 Garner Road players earned college scholarshi­ps, with 15 playing profession­al basketball, during West’s tenure as executive director.

Through the Wake County-based organizati­on called Boys and Girls Succeed, or BAGS, that West owned, he defrauded Potash Corporatio­n of Saskatchew­an, known as

PCS, by fraudulent­ly obtaining matched charitable contributi­ons from PCS.

While based in Canada, PCS had plant locations in the U.S., including one in the Beaufort County community of Aurora. PCS merged with Agrium in 2018 to become Nutrien, which still runs the Nutrien Aurora Phosphate facility.

West worked with Michael Lavern King, a PCS employee, and Martin Fareed Abdullah, a BAGS employee, to get bank checks from PCS employees that showed large charitable donations from PCS employees to BAGS foundation. The fraudulent checks were then used as donation receipts for PCS to match as part of its charitable program. The PCS employees, as many as 13 people, according to court documents, never made donations to BAGS and instead got quarterly $500 kickbacks from the three people for using their employee informatio­n.

King and Abdullah plead guilty on Jan. 23. Their sentencing hearings are scheduled for May 30. West’s sentencing date is June 11.

“Many companies encourage their employees to support local charities by matching their employees’ charitable contributi­ons,” said U.S. Attorney Michael Easley in a news release. “This defendant recruited PSC employees to make fake donations to his charity so he could fraudulent­ly secure over a half-million dollars in matching funds from PSC. He then paid kickbacks to the employees. This defendant was driven by greed to take advantage of a charitable program meant to help those in need. He now faces federal prison.”

The BAGS was a real nonprofit but “provided very minimal services,” according to U.S. Attorney’s Office.

The scheme took place between 2010 and 2018, the same time West led the Garner Road Basketball Club. Tax documents show the BAGS foundation had the same address as the basketball club.

A phone call and email to the current director of the club was not returned.

Staff Writer Steve Wiseman contribute­d to this article

Anna Johnson: 919-829-4807, @anna_m_johnson

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