Ex-US college basketball players charged in game-fixing

SAN DIEGO, (Reuters) – Ten people, including two  former basketball players and a former assistant coach at the  University of San Diego, have been indicted in connection with a scheme to fix games since 2008, federal prosecutors said yesterday.

The defendants were charged in the federal grand jury indictment with scheming to fix University of San Diego Toreros basketball games by bribing players and then betting on the games in Las Vegas.

All 10 defendants were charged with conspiracy to commit sports bribery, conduct an illegal gambling business and the distribution of  marijuana.

The indictment charged that the profits from selling marijuana and betting on the games were used to fund further dealing and bribing.

Among those charged were former Toreros players Brandon Johnson and Brandon Dowdy, and former assistant coach Thaddeus Brown.

“These are very serious allegations and the university is fully cooperating with the investigation,” University of San Diego President Mary Lyons said in a statement, adding the school had contacted the National Collegiate Athletic Association to inform it of the situation.

“As a values-based institution, USD is committed to the principles of integrity, fairness and equity,” Lyons said.

The alleged conspiracy began in 2008, according to the indictment, and a defendant sought to bribe players as late as  March of this year. All but one of the defendants have been  taken into custody.

The University of San Diego is a private Catholic college with about 7,800 full-time students. It competes with other major university basketball programs.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office and the FBI declined to say how much money was won betting or which games were affected.

But the indictment alleges that in February 2010, Johnson “attempted to influence and influenced the outcome of a USD  game for a monetary bribe.”

According to the USD Toreros website, Johnson was playing  as a fifth-year senior that year and was allowed to stay on the  team because an injury at the end of the 2009 season kept him  from playing the maximum number of games allowed by the NCAA.

In February 2010, Johnson became the Toreros’ all-time  leading scorer, and the team lost five games and won one that  month, according to the website.

The indictment states that Brown and Dowdy attempted to  bribe a player to affect the outcome of a game in January 2011,  but does not say if the player accepted the bribe or if any  games were affected.