According to authorities, Portland Trail Blazers head coach Chauncey Billups and Miami Heat player Terry Rozier were arrested Thursday along with over 30 others in connection to two criminal cases. These cases allege schemes to generate millions of dollars through rigged sports bets and poker games involving Mafia families. Billups was charged with conspiring to fix high-stakes card games, while Rozier was accused of a separate scheme using confidential information to create fraudulent bets. Former NBA assistant coach Damon Jones was also arrested and is charged with participating in both schemes.
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Federal authorities announced charges against Portland Trail Blazers coach Chauncey Billups, Miami Heat guard Terry Rozier, and dozens of others Thursday as part of a wide-ranging investigation into illegal sports gambling and poker rigging schemes allegedly backed by the Mafia. The investigation, dubbed “Operation Nothing But Bet” and “Operation Royal Flush,” revealed that Rozier was involved in an insider sports betting scheme, while Billups was implicated in a plot to rig underground poker games. The schemes involved the use of high-tech cheating gadgets and the exploitation of confidential information to allegedly defraud participants. The NBA has placed Rozier and Billups on immediate leave as they address these allegations.
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In a solo opinion, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson criticized the Supreme Court’s handling of the Trump administration’s legal battles, likening it to a game of “Calvinball” where the administration always prevails. Jackson described the NIH case as the latest instance of the court favoring the Executive Branch, highlighting the potential consequences for both the law and the public. This statement marked a departure from her colleagues, as she did not have the support of the other Democratic appointees. Jackson expressed hope that affected parties could maintain their claims long enough for the court to reconsider its stance.
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In a Supreme Court case regarding President Trump’s cancellation of NIH grants, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson sharply criticized the conservative justices for their decision, labeling it as “Calvinball jurisprudence.” Jackson argued that the court’s ruling, which forces plaintiffs to pursue a complex legal process for monetary damages, effectively neuters judicial review and favors the Trump administration. This decision, according to Jackson, allows the cancellation of hundreds of millions of dollars in grants without providing a clear path for plaintiffs to seek complete relief. Jackson accused her conservative colleagues of making up the rules as they go, prioritizing political outcomes over established legal principles.
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