Inside six college basketball games the feds say were fixed
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Inside six college basketball games the feds say were fixed
"On March 5, 2024, in Buffalo, Chicago and Fort Wayne, Indiana, men's college basketball players on three different teams were preparing to do the exact same thing: play badly in their games on purpose to help bettors win, federal prosecutors say. In a 70-page indictment unsealed Thursday, federal prosecutors allege that a gambling ring bribed 39 NCAA basketball players on 17 Division I basketball teams to fix dozens of games over the 2023-24 and 2024-25 seasons."
"While it's unclear how much was bet overall, the indictment shows the gambling ring wagered at least $3.6 million on the first-half and full-game spreads of college games. The two games that saw the most money wagered were $458,000 on Towson to cover the first-half spread against North Carolina A&T on Feb. 29, 2024, and $424,000 on Kent State to cover the first-half spread against Buffalo on Feb. 27, 2024. Both bets won."
A 70-page indictment alleges a gambling ring bribed 39 NCAA men's basketball players across 17 Division I teams to fix dozens of games during the 2023-24 and 2024-25 seasons. The ring reportedly wagered at least $3.6 million on first-half and full-game spreads, including single bets of $458,000 and $424,000 that won. Prosecutors identified specific fixed games, such as Robert Morris vs. Northern Kentucky on Feb. 28, 2024, where recruited players underperformed, allowing bettors to win a $256,000 first-half wager. Text messages and arranged payouts are cited as part of the alleged scheme.
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