6 Most Interesting Claims from the NBA Gambling Scandal Indictments

Breaking down the federal indictment against multiple current and former NBA players that rocked the sports and gambling world.

Ryan Butler - Contributor at Covers.com
Ryan Butler • Senior News Analyst
Oct 24, 2025 • 16:40 ET • 4 min read
Photo By - Imagn Images. Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (6) reacts on the bench after a foul call in the first half against the Milwaukee Bucks at Crypto.com Arena on Feb. 9, 2023. Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

Three former and current NBA players were arrested in two related federal criminal gambling cases Thursday, alleging a shocking scandal at a level unseen in American sports since the widespread legalization of sports betting in 2018.

NBA Hall-of-Famer and current head coach Chauncey Billups and assistant coach Damon Jones were charged with their involvement in illegal high-stakes poker games while Jones and current player Terry Rozier were arrested in a second case involving insider information to place sports bets illegally.

Here are the six most explosive claims from the sports betting indictment:

DraftKings, FanDuel among the legal sportsbooks used

Part of the government’s case against Jones, Rozier, and four other co-conspirators is that they defrauded four sportsbooks by using insider information prohibited by law. The names of of the four books in the indictment were not mentioned, but it says two of the books were the “NBA’s co-official sports betting partners.”

Those two books are DraftKings and FanDuel, the two U.S. leaders by handle.

Four NBA players targeted, including stars

Four NBA players were mentioned, though not named, in the indictment. These anonymous players aren’t charged criminally, but law enforcement officials believe the defendants used insider information on these players to place illegal sports bets.

  • Player 1: A member of the Portland Trail Blazers during the 2022-2023 season, where Billups was the head coach, who sat out a March 24, 2023 game against the Chicago Bulls. He is listed in the indictment as one of the team’s four highest scorers that season, meaning it is either Skylar Mays, Jerami Grant, Anfernee Simons, or nine-time All-Star Damian Lillard. Lillard, Grant, Simons, and Jusuf Nurkic (the team’s No. 5 leading scorer) all sat out that game.

  • Player 2: A starter for the Orlando Magic who didn’t play in an April 6 game against Cleveland. The team’s primary starters that year were Franz Wagner, Paolo Banchero, Markelle Fultz, Wendell Carter Jr., and Gary Harris.

  • Player 3: A “prominent” player for the Los Angeles Lakers who didn’t play in the team’s Feb. 9 game against Milwaukee. LeBron James, a former teammate of Jones, was the most notable player to miss the game, a Lakers loss.

  • Player 4: One of the Lakers’ “best” players during the 2023-2024 season, the indictment alleges, some of the defendants placed bets with the expectation the individual would play fewer minutes than normal during the team’s Jan. 15 game against Oklahoma City. That player was potentially Lakers’ All-Star Anthony Davis, who had the second-most minutes played on the team in a Los Angeles win.

Billups mentioned, but not charged

Billups is “Co-Conspirator 8,” an Oregon resident described as “an NBA player from approximately 1997 through 2014” and a coach since 2021. Though not charged in this probe criminally, the indictment alleges Billups disclosed information to one of the defendants, a friend, about the playing status of one of the Blazers.

The question is the fine line between what a coach tells a friend and what that person does with the information. Officials don’t believe Billups can be charged criminally from what they’ve investigated so far. But it raises more concerns about what an active head coach knew about how information he disclosed would be used for illegal betting.

Roughly $250,000 wagered on one Terry Rozier game

The indictment alleges the syndicate wagered roughly a quarter of a million dollars on Terry Rozier Under props in a March 23 game he left early due to injury.

This is an unusually high amount of money for a player prop on a regular-season NBA game, which presumably triggered alerts from the affected sportsbooks and integrity monitoring services that helped spark the criminal investigation.

7 games mentioned in indictment

The indictment cites two additional Toronto Raptors games in addition to the five mentioned above: a Jan. 26, 2024 loss to the Los Angeles Clippers and a March 20, 2024 loss to the Sacramento Kings.

Both games involved Jontay Porter, who has pled guilty to criminal charges and is awaiting sentencing. The indictment alleges some of the defendants threatened Porter over his gambling debts to leave games early, allowing them to bet on his player prop Unders.

Of the seven, the only game where the outcome went against the defendants was the Lakers game where “Player 4” played more than they had allegedly anticipated.

Bettor loses big

An unnamed co-conspirator not charged in the indictment allegedly won $1,500 on a bet using information that Rozier wouldn’t play a full game. The indictment claims the bettor lost $4,000 on unrelated bets in the ensuing days using the same sportsbook.

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Ryan Butler - Covers
Senior News Analyst

Ryan is a Senior Editor at Covers reporting on gaming industry legislative, regulatory, corporate, and financial news. He has reported on gaming since the Supreme Court struck down the federal sports wagering ban in 2018. Based in Tampa, Ryan graduated from the University of Florida with a major in Journalism and a minor in Sport Management.  Before reporting on gaming, Ryan was a sports and political journalist in Florida and Virginia. He covered Vice Presidential nominee Tim Kaine and the rest of the Virginia Congressional delegation during the 2016 election cycle. He also worked as Sports Editor of the Chiefland (Fla.) Citizen and Digital Editor for the Sarasota (Fla.) Observer.

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