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Shannon Brown, Darius Miles and Glen Davis among 18 ex-NBA players charged with fraud

People walk past an NBA logo.
A federal indictment alleges a widespread scheme to defraud the NBA’s benefit plan by submitting false claims for medical and dental expenses.
(Associated Press)
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Eighteen former NBA players were charged Thursday with pocketing about $2.5 million illegally by defrauding the league’s health and welfare benefit plan in a scam that authorities said involved claiming fictitious medical and dental expenses.

“The defendants’ playbook involved fraud and deception,” U.S. Atty. Audrey Strauss told a news conference after FBI agents across the country arrested 15 ex-players and one of their wives in a three-year conspiracy that authorities say started in 2017.

According to an indictment returned in Manhattan federal court, the former players teamed up to defraud the supplemental coverage plan by submitting fraudulent claims to be reimbursed for medical and dental procedures that never happened.

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The list of NBA players included former Lakers guard Shannon Brown and former Clippers forwards Darius Miles, Glen Davis and Ruben Patterson as well as guard Sebastian Telfair.

Brown played for the Lakers for three seasons and was part of their NBA championship teams in 2009 and 2010.

Miles was the third overall pick in the 2000 draft by the Clippers and played the first two of his seven NBA seasons with the team. Davis played the last two seasons of his eight-season career with the Clippers in 2013-15. Patterson, nicknamed the “Kobe Stopper” because he defended well against Kobe Bryant, played the last season of his career with the Clippers in 2007-08.

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Telfair was a high school star in New York who was highly touted when he turned pro, though his NBA career with eight franchises, including 39 games with the Clippers in 2009-10, never brought the stardom some had expected.

Miles earned $62 million in his career, Patterson earned $37 million, Davis earned $34 million, Telfair earned $19.5 million and Brown earned $17.5 million.

Strauss said prosecutors have travel records, email and GPS data that proves the ex-players were sometimes far from the medical and dental offices at the times when they were supposedly being treated.

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In one instance, she said, an ex-player was playing basketball in Taiwan when he was supposedly getting $48,000 worth of root canals and crowns on eight teeth at a Beverly Hills dental office in December 2018.

The indictment said the scheme was carried out from at least 2017 to 2020, when the plan — funded primarily by NBA teams — received false claims totaling about $3.9 million. Of that, the defendants received about $2.5 million in fraudulent proceeds.

Strauss said each defendant made false claims for reimbursements that ranged from $65,000 to $420,000.

A request for comment to the league wasn’t immediately returned.

Michael J. Driscoll, the head of New York’s FBI office, said the case demonstrated the FBI’s continued focus on uncovering fraud scams that cost the healthcare industry tens of billions of dollars a year.

Strauss said the conspiracy was led by Terrence Williams, who began his career as a first-round NBA draft pick in 2009. The indictment said he submitted $19,000 in fraudulent claims to the plan in November 2017 for chiropractic care. The claims led to a $7,672 payout for Williams.

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The indictment said he then recruited other former NBA players to defraud the plan and offered to provide fraudulent invoices from a chiropractor and dentist in Southern California and a wellness office in Washington state.

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At least 10 of the ex-players paid kickbacks totaling about $230,000 to Williams, according to the court papers. A lawyer who has represented Williams in the past declined to comment.

What was then the New Jersey Nets picked Williams at No. 11 in the 2009 draft. He went on to play for four franchises — the Nets, Boston, Houston and Sacramento — over four seasons as a role player, averaging 7.1 points per game. He was waived by Boston two days after his 26th birthday in 2013 and hasn’t appeared in the league since.

Among others charged was Tony Allen, a six-time All-Defensive team selection and a member of the 2008 champion Boston Celtics. His wife was also indicted. Tony Allen was not in custody as of Thursday afternoon.

For the most part, though, the ex-players charged had journeyman careers playing for several teams and never reached anywhere close to the enormous stardom or salary that top players command.

Still, the 18 players combined to make $343 million in their on-court NBA careers, not counting outside income, endorsements or what any may have made playing overseas.

Strauss declined to speculate on their motivations or financial situations, saying to do so would go beyond the facts in the indictment.

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