NBA Requests Phones and Files in Widening Gambling Probe

The NBA has significantly expanded its investigation into alleged illegal gambling activity, formally requesting documents, mobile phones, and electronic
iGaming Times
- The NBA has requested mobile phones and records from staff across several teams, including the Los Angeles Lakers.
- The move follows federal indictments against Miami Heat guard Terry Rozier and former player Damon Jones.
- Lakers staff members Mike Mancias and Randy Mims have reportedly provided devices to investigators.
- Damon Jones is alleged to have sold non-public injury information to bettors, including details on a key Lakers player.
- Portland Trail Blazers coach Chauncey Billups was arrested in a related probe into underground poker and organised crime.
NBA Seizes Devices as Investigation Expands
The NBA has significantly expanded its investigation into alleged illegal gambling activity, formally requesting documents, mobile phones, and electronic records from individuals across multiple teams. This escalation follows the unsealing of federal indictments last month involving Miami Heat guard Terry Rozier and former player-turned-coach Damon Jones.
According to ESPN, the league has appointed an independent law firm to lead the inquiry. The scope of the probe has widened to include the Los Angeles Lakers, with investigators reportedly contacting around a dozen staff members. Sources indicate that Lakers assistant trainer Mike Mancias and executive administrator Randy Mims are among those who have already provided their devices. Both are reportedly cooperating fully and have not been charged or named in federal documents.
Allegations of Insider Information Trading
The investigation is focused on allegations that team insiders provided non-public information to gamblers. Federal prosecutors allege that Damon Jones sold details regarding player injuries to associates during the 2022-23 and 2023-24 seasons.
The indictment claims Jones acquired information from a team trainer and passed it to intermediaries. In one specific instance before a January 2024 game against the Oklahoma City Thunder, Jones allegedly provided advance insight into a key Lakers player’s condition. A bettor subsequently placed approximately $100,000 against the Lakers. However, the wager failed when the player performed normally and the team won, reportedly leading to disputes over payment for the tip. Jones has pleaded not guilty to charges of wire fraud and money laundering.
Rozier and Billups Ensnared in Broader Crackdown
The scandal also involves active players and head coaches. Terry Rozier faces accusations that he informed a childhood friend of his plan to exit a March 2023 game early. Prosecutors allege this information was resold, leading to over $263,000 being wagered on “unders” for his performance. Rozier left the game after nine minutes citing a foot issue that was not on the injury report.
In a parallel development, Portland Trail Blazers head coach Chauncey Billups was arrested as part of a dual federal operation targeting organised crime. Billups faces charges connected to underground poker games alleged to have utilised cheating devices. While Billups is not named in the specific sports-betting indictment involving Rozier and Jones, prosecutors have accused an unnamed co-conspirator-whose career timeline mirrors Billups’-of sharing player availability information. Billups denies any wrongdoing.
Expert Analysis: Integrity Crisis Hits the Locker Room
This investigation represents a nightmare scenario for the NBA: the industrialised leakage of “insider info” from the locker room to the black market. While previous scandals, such as the Jontay Porter case, focused on individual player prop bets, this probe suggests a systemic breach involving trainers, administrators, and coaches.
The allegations against Damon Jones-that he harvested info from a trainer to sell to a syndicate-expose a critical vulnerability. While players are monitored closely, the “support staff” ecosystem (trainers, admins) has access to the same sensitive data but often faces less scrutiny and lower compensation, making them prime targets for corruption.
Furthermore, the arrest of a sitting head coach like Chauncey Billups, even if tangential to the direct betting charges, links the league to organised crime elements. This forces the NBA to confront a reality where gambling is not just a compliance issue, but a criminal one. Commissioner Adam Silver’s description of the events as “deeply troubling” is an understatement; if proven, this confirms that the firewall between team operations and betting syndicates has been breached at multiple levels.
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