TLDR
Contents
- Jalen Smith admitted guilt for orchestrating a college basketball point-shaving operation, compensating athletes $10,000–$30,000 per contest
- The conspiracy encompassed 39+ college athletes from 17 NCAA programs and compromised more than 29 contests from 2022 through 2025
- Conspirators specifically pursued athletes with minimal NIL earnings and frequently manipulated first-half betting lines to maintain final score integrity
- The criminal enterprise originated in China’s professional basketball league before transitioning to NCAA competition
- Federal authorities identified five accomplices, several connected to an independent NBA gambling probe
On March 9, Jalen Smith entered a guilty plea in federal court, acknowledging his central position as a coordinator in what prosecutors describe as one of the most extensive point-shaving operations in collegiate basketball history. Smith confessed to compensating athletes to intentionally reduce their performance, ensuring their squads failed to cover established betting spreads.
Athletes received cash payments ranging from $10,000 to $30,000 for each compromised contest. Smith and his collaborators subsequently wagered substantial sums against those squads through licensed sportsbooks and betting intermediaries.
The criminal conspiracy operated from September 2022 until February 2025 at minimum. Federal prosecutors documented involvement from more than 39 college athletes representing at least 17 NCAA basketball programs, with over 29 games demonstrably compromised.
Smith confronts a potential 20-year federal prison sentence for wire fraud violations. Additional bribery charges related to sporting contests carry a five-year maximum sentence.
The syndicate initially launched operations within the Chinese Basketball Association, where core group members first established point-shaving arrangements before expanding operations to NCAA men’s basketball competitions.
How Fixers Chose Their Targets
Smith and his associates deliberately avoided recruiting prominent athletes. Their strategy concentrated on identifying players with minimal or nonexistent NIL revenue — particularly athletes competing for mid-major conference programs without lucrative sponsorship arrangements.
NIL compensation received legal authorization in 2021, creating opportunities for college athletes to monetize their name, image, and likeness. Despite this policy change, the overwhelming majority of Division I basketball players continue earning minimal or zero compensation.
For those players, cash offers of $15,000 or higher represented significant financial incentives. Federal prosecutors revealed that athletes also received compensation for providing confidential information regarding teammates’ health conditions and anticipated playing time.
Smith maintained continuous communication with compromised players throughout game action. Court documents reference one specific incident where he messaged a player during halftime of a competitive contest, demanding the score differential “be a blowout” and complaining the player was costing him substantial losses.
Following successful betting outcomes, Smith personally traveled to university campuses to distribute cash payments directly.
When the Scheme Failed
The conspiracy did not consistently produce desired outcomes. During one matchup between Buffalo and Kent State, conspirators wagered at least $424,000 but suffered significant losses after missing the spread by merely half a point.
Kent State needed to establish a first-half advantage exceeding 8.5 points but only led by 8 at intermission. Three compromised players combined for just one point during the final 13 minutes of that half, conspicuously missing layups and uncontested dunks.
Conspirators regularly targeted first-half betting spreads. This tactical approach allowed them to manipulate specific game segments without necessarily impacting final results.
Co-Conspirators and NBA Links
Smith operated within a network of accomplices. Federal authorities named five co-conspirators. Marves Fairley and Shane Hennen allegedly initiated the original CBA manipulation scheme. Former NBA player Antonio Blakeney accepted bribes, recruited teammates for the conspiracy, and subsequently approached NCAA athletes. His professional experience with the Chicago Bulls provided credibility when approaching college players.
Fairley deposited a package containing at least $200,000 in cash at Blakeney’s Florida storage facility following the conclusion of the CBA season.
Fairley and Hennen face additional scrutiny in a separate October 2025 federal investigation that produced 30 arrests connected to an illegal poker operation and alleged NBA gambling violations.
That investigation includes allegations that confidential information about Miami Heat guard Terry Rozier’s early game departure in 2023 was sold to bettors seeking advantages on proposition wagers. Rozier has categorically denied these allegations.
Portland Trail Blazers head coach Chauncey Billups and former player Damon Jones allegedly participated in manipulated poker competitions. Jones faces accusations of selling confidential insider information regarding player injuries and starting lineups to gamblers, including Fairley.
The FBI discovered the NCAA conspiracy after millions of dollars moved through regulated sportsbook operations over more than two years without activating integrity monitoring systems. NCAA President Charlie Baker subsequently urged state gaming regulators to prohibit specific betting markets, including first-half spreads and individual player proposition wagers.
