NEW YORK — A New York man was charged Tuesday in a sports betting scandal that spurred the NBA to ban Jontay Porter for life, with the charges marking the first known criminal fallout from the matter.
Porter is not named in the court complaint, but its specifics about ''Player 1'' match the details of the former Toronto Raptors player's downfall this spring. Brooklyn federal prosecutors declined to comment on whether Porter is under investigation.
But Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Breon Peace said the alleged co-conspirators and ''Player 1'' participated ''in a brazen, illegal betting scheme that had a corrupting influence on two games and numerous bets.''
''Whether on the court or in the casino, every point matters,'' Peace said in a statement.
The complaint says the player communicated directly with defendant Long Phi Pham and alleged co-defendants whose names are redacted.
After the NBA and others began investigating this spring, the player warned Pham and others via an encrypted messaging app April 4 that they ''might just get hit w a rico'' — an apparent reference to the common acronym for a federal racketeering charge — and asked whether they had deleted ''all the stuff'' from their phones, according to the complaint.
Current contact information for Porter could not immediately be found.
According to the complaint, the player owed ''significant gambling debts'' to at least one of the alleged conspirators and was encouraged to settle them by doing a ''special'' — strategically bowing out of games so that wagers could pay off for those in the know, who could bet on him underperforming expectations.