Feds indite 26 ppl in basketball scheme
Posted: Thu Jan 15, 2026 4:50 pm
39+ players across 17 Division I programs fixed or attempted to fix 29+ games.
The scheme ran from September 2022 to February 2025
Prosecutors say from 2023 to 2025, the participants turned their attention to the NCAA, recruiting players and paying bribes between $10,000 and $30,000 per game. According to the indictment, more than 39 players on 17 different teams attempted to fix more than 29 NCAA Division 1 men’s basketball games, including conference tournament contests. The organizers of the alleged scheme made wagers totaling millions of dollars.
Charges include bribery in sporting contests, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, and wire fraud.
How the Fixing Worked
Fixers targeted first‑half spreads in mid‑major games.
Players were paid $10k–$30k to miss shots, commit turnovers, or otherwise underperform.
Fixers placed bets across multiple sportsbooks to avoid detection
Players Still Active This Week
Four indicted players played NCAA games within the last few days:
Simeon Cottle (Kennesaw State)
Carlos Hart (Eastern Michigan)
Oumar Koureissi (Texas Southern)
Camian Shell (Delaware State)
How the Scheme Started
Began with CBA games in 2023 where Blakeney allegedly underperformed on purpose.
After success, fixers expanded to NCAA games in 2023–2025.
Schools Implicated
Across all reporting, players came from:
DePaul (multiple players, detailed in CBS Chicago)
Tulane
La Salle
Fordham
Buffalo
Nicholls State
Saint Louis
Kennesaw State
New Orleans (two players previously sanctioned)
Eastern Michigan
Texas Southern
Georgetown, Butler, St. John’s (games allegedly fixed) …and more across 17 total programs
The scheme ran from September 2022 to February 2025
Prosecutors say from 2023 to 2025, the participants turned their attention to the NCAA, recruiting players and paying bribes between $10,000 and $30,000 per game. According to the indictment, more than 39 players on 17 different teams attempted to fix more than 29 NCAA Division 1 men’s basketball games, including conference tournament contests. The organizers of the alleged scheme made wagers totaling millions of dollars.
Charges include bribery in sporting contests, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, and wire fraud.
How the Fixing Worked
Fixers targeted first‑half spreads in mid‑major games.
Players were paid $10k–$30k to miss shots, commit turnovers, or otherwise underperform.
Fixers placed bets across multiple sportsbooks to avoid detection
Players Still Active This Week
Four indicted players played NCAA games within the last few days:
Simeon Cottle (Kennesaw State)
Carlos Hart (Eastern Michigan)
Oumar Koureissi (Texas Southern)
Camian Shell (Delaware State)
How the Scheme Started
Began with CBA games in 2023 where Blakeney allegedly underperformed on purpose.
After success, fixers expanded to NCAA games in 2023–2025.
Schools Implicated
Across all reporting, players came from:
DePaul (multiple players, detailed in CBS Chicago)
Tulane
La Salle
Fordham
Buffalo
Nicholls State
Saint Louis
Kennesaw State
New Orleans (two players previously sanctioned)
Eastern Michigan
Texas Southern
Georgetown, Butler, St. John’s (games allegedly fixed) …and more across 17 total programs