Re: Bribery Scandal - FBI Probe - Book Richardson Involved
Posted: Tue Oct 17, 2017 12:12 pm
Wow RJ big ups on the info.
A co-op community for Arizona Fans
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2005 draft had seven HS drafted: Martell Webster, Andrew Bynum, Gerald Green, CJ Miles, Monta Ellis, Lou Williams, and Amir Johnson.Jefe wrote:Before the one and done rule there were what, max 2-3 high schoolers in each draft? This may keep the creme of the crop out of the NCAA but we won't see 10+ guys skipping college, will we? Kentucky, NC, Duke, and Kansas will have to work harder in recruiting
We maybe get one of those guys a year and we get them for 40 games if we're lucky. Fuck it, let the top ten bolt and we'll get back to business as usual.rgdeuce wrote:2005 draft had seven HS drafted: Martell Webster, Andrew Bynum, Gerald Green, CJ Miles, Monta Ellis, Lou Williams, and Amir Johnson.Jefe wrote:Before the one and done rule there were what, max 2-3 high schoolers in each draft? This may keep the creme of the crop out of the NCAA but we won't see 10+ guys skipping college, will we? Kentucky, NC, Duke, and Kansas will have to work harder in recruiting
2004 draft had eight: Dwight Howard, Shaun Livingston, Robert Swift, Sebastian Telfair, Al Jefferson, Josh Smith, JR Smith, and Dorell Wright.
I think we would see 8-10+ guys skipping most years if they removed the one-and-done rules, especially with these 2-way contracts. The D/G-league has come a long way since 2005 too.
Damn, thanks a lot LeBronrgdeuce wrote:2005 draft had seven HS drafted: Martell Webster, Andrew Bynum, Gerald Green, CJ Miles, Monta Ellis, Lou Williams, and Amir Johnson.
2004 draft had eight: Dwight Howard, Shaun Livingston, Robert Swift, Sebastian Telfair, Al Jefferson, Josh Smith, JR Smith, and Dorell Wright.
I think we would see 8-10+ guys skipping most years if they removed the one-and-done rules, especially with these 2-way contracts. The D/G-league has come a long way since 2005 too.
From personal experience, I don't think the FBI would disclose to a company's attorney how many subpoenas had actually been sent out in an active investigation, so they were probably ballparking their estimate. But I do agree that in a case like this that the FBI is chasing the money, so many of theose subpoenas are probably to financial institutions about individual transactions. There will be a lot of those.gumby wrote:10,000 subpoenas? Doing a great job of keeping them secret.
He has a lot of practice lying.SunnyAZ wrote:Convo with Pitino tonight after bbal games. Said he took a lie detector test and passed.
With a lot of this stuff, there are already tons of eyes outside of the FBI looking at disclosure materials now that prosecutions have started. They are likely still seeking indictments, so you got even more US attorneys, defense counsel, grand jurors, judges, bailiffs, US Marshals, etc who can all be around for someone to make a comment about how many subpoenas were in the boxes of disclosure, or they are reviewing it themselves. Really speaks to the scope of the investigation because you are correct, a large number will be financial institutions, plus internet providers, cellphone companies, social media and email entities, etc. 10k is a ton regardless, which tells you if accurate, 100s have been or are being looked at closely.AZ2000 wrote:From personal experience, I don't think the FBI would disclose to a company's attorney how many subpoenas had actually been sent out in an active investigation, so they were probably ballparking their estimate. But I do agree that in a case like this that the FBI is chasing the money, so many of theose subpoenas are probably to financial institutions about individual transactions. There will be a lot of those.gumby wrote:10,000 subpoenas? Doing a great job of keeping them secret.
None of that is new. It's all from the oroginal complaint.Irish27 wrote:KVOA has an update, there is some good news and also bad news. The good news, Miller might not of known: According to some of the defendant's own testimony though, Miller and other head coaches may not have been involved. Sports agent Christian Dawkins is quoted as saying "the head coach ain't willing to (take bribes) 'cause they're making too much money. And it's too risky.....better to work with an assistant coach - as opposed to a head coach because then you got direct access to the athletes."
The bad news: According to an FBI complaint the alleged bribery scheme began in the first few months of 2017.
On March 8, 2017, Richardson and another unnamed UA coach sat down with a financial manager named Munish Sood at a Las Vegas restaurant.
Also at that meeting was a confidential witness for the FBI. The diner meeting lasted only a few minutes, but in a recorded conversation, Sood later told the witness the meeting had been "good" and that "the coaches are interested in definitely working with us." The complaint also says Sood later had two more conversations with the unnamed assistant coach.While the other unnamed coach was never arrested or identified by law enforcement officials. The complaint say he later left the University of Arizona. The only coach who has left the UA recently is former Assistant Coach Joe Pasternack.
Several UA players are also mentioned but not named in the complaint. Player 4 received $15,000 in cash. Richardson is described as saying he can funnel Players 6 and 7 to Dawkins and Sood. And a another unnamed players is described as already having taken money.
http://www.kvoa.com/story/36630801/n4t- ... ll-bribery" target="_blank
rgdeuce wrote:Someone give KVOA a pulitzer
The more I think about that article, the more I get hacked off. They took the FBI complaint, added a nothing quote from Pasternack, included false info (the sentence about how Arizona paid a player 15k is at best quarter truth) slapped a News 4 Investigators on it and published.rgdeuce wrote:Someone give KVOA a pulitzer
Yeah... well screw you!UAEebs86 wrote:rgdeuce wrote:Someone give KVOA a pulitzer
Couldn't believe Ari won a local Emmy. Can't stand that guy.
Don't know how all that works, but the standards must be low because that guy is garbage.UAEebs86 wrote:rgdeuce wrote:Someone give KVOA a pulitzer
Couldn't believe Ari won a local Emmy. Can't stand that guy.
Spaceman Spiff wrote:None of that is new. It's all from the oroginal complaint.Irish27 wrote:KVOA has an update, there is some good news and also bad news. The good news, Miller might not of known: According to some of the defendant's own testimony though, Miller and other head coaches may not have been involved. Sports agent Christian Dawkins is quoted as saying "the head coach ain't willing to (take bribes) 'cause they're making too much money. And it's too risky.....better to work with an assistant coach - as opposed to a head coach because then you got direct access to the athletes."
The bad news: According to an FBI complaint the alleged bribery scheme began in the first few months of 2017.
On March 8, 2017, Richardson and another unnamed UA coach sat down with a financial manager named Munish Sood at a Las Vegas restaurant.
Also at that meeting was a confidential witness for the FBI. The diner meeting lasted only a few minutes, but in a recorded conversation, Sood later told the witness the meeting had been "good" and that "the coaches are interested in definitely working with us." The complaint also says Sood later had two more conversations with the unnamed assistant coach.While the other unnamed coach was never arrested or identified by law enforcement officials. The complaint say he later left the University of Arizona. The only coach who has left the UA recently is former Assistant Coach Joe Pasternack.
Several UA players are also mentioned but not named in the complaint. Player 4 received $15,000 in cash. Richardson is described as saying he can funnel Players 6 and 7 to Dawkins and Sood. And a another unnamed players is described as already having taken money.
http://www.kvoa.com/story/36630801/n4t- ... ll-bribery" target="_blank
Alieberman wrote:Yeah... well screw you!UAEebs86 wrote:rgdeuce wrote:Someone give KVOA a pulitzer
Couldn't believe Ari won a local Emmy. Can't stand that guy.
So the evidence they're talking about here as being important is a recording of the target of an investigation (Sood) saying "They want to work with us"?Irish27 wrote:KVOA has an update, there is some good news and also bad news. The good news, Miller might not of known: According to some of the defendant's own testimony though, Miller and other head coaches may not have been involved. Sports agent Christian Dawkins is quoted as saying "the head coach ain't willing to (take bribes) 'cause they're making too much money. And it's too risky.....better to work with an assistant coach - as opposed to a head coach because then you got direct access to the athletes."
The bad news: According to an FBI complaint the alleged bribery scheme began in the first few months of 2017.
On March 8, 2017, Richardson and another unnamed UA coach sat down with a financial manager named Munish Sood at a Las Vegas restaurant.
Also at that meeting was a confidential witness for the FBI. The diner meeting lasted only a few minutes, but in a recorded conversation, Sood later told the witness the meeting had been "good" and that "the coaches are interested in definitely working with us." The complaint also says Sood later had two more conversations with the unnamed assistant coach.While the other unnamed coach was never arrested or identified by law enforcement officials. The complaint say he later left the University of Arizona. The only coach who has left the UA recently is former Assistant Coach Joe Pasternack.
Several UA players are also mentioned but not named in the complaint. Player 4 received $15,000 in cash. Richardson is described as saying he can funnel Players 6 and 7 to Dawkins and Sood. And a another unnamed players is described as already having taken money.
http://www.kvoa.com/story/36630801/n4t- ... ll-bribery" target="_blank
You're still trying...?Russ Smith wrote:Spaceman Spiff wrote:None of that is new. It's all from the oroginal complaint.Irish27 wrote:KVOA has an update, there is some good news and also bad news. The good news, Miller might not of known: According to some of the defendant's own testimony though, Miller and other head coaches may not have been involved. Sports agent Christian Dawkins is quoted as saying "the head coach ain't willing to (take bribes) 'cause they're making too much money. And it's too risky.....better to work with an assistant coach - as opposed to a head coach because then you got direct access to the athletes."
The bad news: According to an FBI complaint the alleged bribery scheme began in the first few months of 2017.
On March 8, 2017, Richardson and another unnamed UA coach sat down with a financial manager named Munish Sood at a Las Vegas restaurant.
Also at that meeting was a confidential witness for the FBI. The diner meeting lasted only a few minutes, but in a recorded conversation, Sood later told the witness the meeting had been "good" and that "the coaches are interested in definitely working with us." The complaint also says Sood later had two more conversations with the unnamed assistant coach.While the other unnamed coach was never arrested or identified by law enforcement officials. The complaint say he later left the University of Arizona. The only coach who has left the UA recently is former Assistant Coach Joe Pasternack.
Several UA players are also mentioned but not named in the complaint. Player 4 received $15,000 in cash. Richardson is described as saying he can funnel Players 6 and 7 to Dawkins and Sood. And a another unnamed players is described as already having taken money.
http://www.kvoa.com/story/36630801/n4t- ... ll-bribery" target="_blank
I'd have to read it again to be sure but I don't recall seeing Book say in the original complaint that he was going to restrict his recommendations of agents to one now instead of several, and then mention that if you give kids 3-4 choices they're going to be kids. It was not in context so you can't tell exactly what Book was saying there but one way to read that is Book has been steering kids to agents for awhile now, but because Dawkins was going to be paying him 5k a month to do it, he was going to only steer them to Dawkins. If that's what was meant there, that's new and it's not exactly good because it implies Book was doing it before Dawkins.
The other way to take that is Book meant kid plays for Arizona, turns pro and then asks me for help picking an agent, I used to refer them to several different guys, now I'll just refer to Dawkins. the Dawkins part is still bad but the providing advice on agents after a kid has gone pro is not, it's not against the rules unless there's some agreement in place before. that's why I never understood why the NCAA didnt' crack down on the Oakland Soldiers, the co founder of the program is an NBA agent, his best friend is a financial adviser, and several of their former players hired said agent and said adviser after they went pro, it couldn't have been more obvious what the deal there was but I always assumed the NCAA was saying they had no evidence there was a deal in place kids were just picking those guys AFTER they went pro and that made it allowable.
Imagine living your life as redundant as Russ Smith.UAdevil wrote:Russ needs to give it up. He's posting the same crap on at least 3 other forums. We don't need your 'wisdom' Russ.
Statfreak77 wrote:Imagine living your life as redundant as Russ Smith.UAdevil wrote:Russ needs to give it up. He's posting the same crap on at least 3 other forums. We don't need your 'wisdom' Russ.
Now that is hilarious coming from someone who's clearly reading both Bruinzone, a free board, and BRO a pay board.UAdevil wrote:Russ needs to give it up. He's posting the same crap on at least 3 other forums. We don't need your 'wisdom' Russ.
Without assumptions, you would have 85% less content here.Russ Smith wrote:Now that is hilarious coming from someone who's clearly reading both Bruinzone, a free board, and BRO a pay board.UAdevil wrote:Russ needs to give it up. He's posting the same crap on at least 3 other forums. We don't need your 'wisdom' Russ.
There's 2 ways to take what Book said, either it's I've been steering players to other agents before but now it's just you, or after they go pro and ask me for advice, I'll tell them to come to you instead of the other guys I used to recommend. But given that they're literally discussing a deal that's going to pay Book 5K a month to steer CURRENT and future players, I think we can reasonably assume Book had been steering players to agents before the FBI got involved.
He also could have easily assumed two were UCLA boards, plus the ASFN board that was already posted here. I mean, you turn conjecture, rumors, and assumptions into facts. Why cant we?Russ Smith wrote:Now that is hilarious coming from someone who's clearly reading both Bruinzone, a free board, and BRO a pay board.UAdevil wrote:Russ needs to give it up. He's posting the same crap on at least 3 other forums. We don't need your 'wisdom' Russ.
Spaceman Spiff wrote: It is a poor effort and the author's mother should be ashamed she brought such lazy sensationalism into this world.
Russ Smith wrote:Now that is hilarious coming from someone who's clearly reading both Bruinzone, a free board, and BRO a pay board.UAdevil wrote:Russ needs to give it up. He's posting the same crap on at least 3 other forums. We don't need your 'wisdom' Russ.
There's 2 ways to take what Book said, either it's I've been steering players to other agents before but now it's just you, or after they go pro and ask me for advice, I'll tell them to come to you instead of the other guys I used to recommend. But given that they're literally discussing a deal that's going to pay Book 5K a month to steer CURRENT and future players, I think we can reasonably assume Book had been steering players to agents before the FBI got involved.
Why do you care so much that you're reading my posts on TWO rival boards and a neutral board?UAdevil wrote:Russ Smith wrote:Now that is hilarious coming from someone who's clearly reading both Bruinzone, a free board, and BRO a pay board.UAdevil wrote:Russ needs to give it up. He's posting the same crap on at least 3 other forums. We don't need your 'wisdom' Russ.
There's 2 ways to take what Book said, either it's I've been steering players to other agents before but now it's just you, or after they go pro and ask me for advice, I'll tell them to come to you instead of the other guys I used to recommend. But given that they're literally discussing a deal that's going to pay Book 5K a month to steer CURRENT and future players, I think we can reasonably assume Book had been steering players to agents before the FBI got involved.
Why do you care so much that you're on top of this on a rival board, a neutral board (asfn) and your team's boards? Seriously, what are you trying to accomplish here? You're having this conversation elsewhere. It just comes off as "UCLA honk needs to educate poor little UA fans".
rgdeuce wrote:Season is here and people wanna talk hoops. Get lost Russ.
That was written so poorly I literally have no idea what your point is?TucsonClip wrote:He also could have easily assumed two were UCLA boards, plus the ASFN board that was already posted here. I mean, you turn conjecture, rumors, and assumptions into facts. Why cant we?Russ Smith wrote:Now that is hilarious coming from someone who's clearly reading both Bruinzone, a free board, and BRO a pay board.UAdevil wrote:Russ needs to give it up. He's posting the same crap on at least 3 other forums. We don't need your 'wisdom' Russ.
Welcome to our world when you post. Pretty fucking annoying, isnt it?Russ Smith wrote:I literally have no idea what your point is?
So funny. TV often does this thing where something is already reported based on information available to all, but they do a report anyway.Spaceman Spiff wrote:None of that is new. It's all from the oroginal complaint.Irish27 wrote:KVOA has an update, there is some good news and also bad news. The good news, Miller might not of known: According to some of the defendant's own testimony though, Miller and other head coaches may not have been involved. Sports agent Christian Dawkins is quoted as saying "the head coach ain't willing to (take bribes) 'cause they're making too much money. And it's too risky.....better to work with an assistant coach - as opposed to a head coach because then you got direct access to the athletes."
The bad news: According to an FBI complaint the alleged bribery scheme began in the first few months of 2017.
On March 8, 2017, Richardson and another unnamed UA coach sat down with a financial manager named Munish Sood at a Las Vegas restaurant.
Also at that meeting was a confidential witness for the FBI. The diner meeting lasted only a few minutes, but in a recorded conversation, Sood later told the witness the meeting had been "good" and that "the coaches are interested in definitely working with us." The complaint also says Sood later had two more conversations with the unnamed assistant coach.While the other unnamed coach was never arrested or identified by law enforcement officials. The complaint say he later left the University of Arizona. The only coach who has left the UA recently is former Assistant Coach Joe Pasternack.
Several UA players are also mentioned but not named in the complaint. Player 4 received $15,000 in cash. Richardson is described as saying he can funnel Players 6 and 7 to Dawkins and Sood. And a another unnamed players is described as already having taken money.
http://www.kvoa.com/story/36630801/n4t- ... ll-bribery" target="_blank
Good to know. So win and hold breath.The FBI has asked Arizona and the NCAA to pause any investigations into college basketball’s ongoing scandal until after federal agents complete their exploration into illegal recruiting.
With the NCAA temporarily stepping out of the FBI’s fact-gathering process, Arizona’s 2017-18 season will almost surely be played without penalties. The postseason and a potential Final Four are in play.
no my posts make sense, have a point, and are written in English.TucsonClip wrote:Welcome to our world when you post. Pretty fucking annoying, isnt it?Russ Smith wrote:I literally have no idea what your point is?
Haha. No.Russ Smith wrote:no my posts make sense, have a point, and are written in English.TucsonClip wrote:Welcome to our world when you post. Pretty fucking annoying, isnt it?Russ Smith wrote:I literally have no idea what your point is?
Maybe should have been more specific: its not the offseason anymore, meaning we have less time/tolerance to deal with your speculative drama.Russ Smith wrote:rgdeuce wrote:Season is here and people wanna talk hoops. Get lost Russ.
Silly me I assumed a thread called Bribery Scandal-FBI probe-Book Richardson involved might be about the FBI scandal and not the season. Mea culpa.
Is there a link? Sweet anyway you read it though...gumby wrote:From Hansen:
Good to know. So win and hold breath.The FBI has asked Arizona and the NCAA to pause any investigations into college basketball’s ongoing scandal until after federal agents complete their exploration into illegal recruiting.
With the NCAA temporarily stepping out of the FBI’s fact-gathering process, Arizona’s 2017-18 season will almost surely be played without penalties. The postseason and a potential Final Four are in play.
http://tucson.com/sports/arizonawildcat ... 1f440.html" target="_blankCatFanOneMil wrote:Is there a link? Sweet anyway you read it though...
Only in the sad, depressing world you live in.Russ Smith wrote:no my posts make sense, have a point, and are written in English.TucsonClip wrote:Welcome to our world when you post. Pretty fucking annoying, isnt it?Russ Smith wrote:I literally have no idea what your point is?
Never take down the banner.CalStateTempe wrote:Sweet.
Win and vacate.