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Fixer pleads guilty in NCAA basketball point-shaving scheme

By Thomson Reuters Mar 9, 2026 | 9:07 PM

One of the people accused of being a ringleader in a plot to affect outcomes in college basketball games pleaded guilty to charges Monday.

Jalen Smith, ​30, of Charlotte made guilty pleas to charges ‌of bribery, wire fraud and illegal possession of a firearm in front of U.S. District Judge Nitza I. Quinones Alejandro in Philadelphia.

The U.S. Department of Justice charged 26 people, including ex-NBA player and LSU star ‌Antonio ​Blakeney, in January, accusing them of ⁠involvement in a point-shaving ⁠plot.

The prosecution alleged that Smith, a player trainer in North Carolina, was among six “fixers” who wrangled players at minor- and mid-major college teams “to underperform and help ensure their team ​failed to cover the spread in games during the 2023-24 and 2024-25 NCAA men’s basketball seasons.”

According to prosecutors, “Smith ⁠had a leadership role in the ⁠scheme, particularly in recruiting, managing and paying players ​for their roles,” NBC News reported.

Players alleged to have been ​involved came from Abilene Christian, Alabama State, Buffalo, Coppin ‌State, DePaul, Eastern Michigan, Fordham, Kennesaw State, La Salle, New Orleans, Nicholls State, North Carolina A&T, Northwestern State, Robert Morris, Saint Louis, Southern Miss and Tulane, according to The Athletic.

Per ⁠the prosecution, 29 or more games were fixed, with gamblers receiving dollars in payouts on the affected contests.

Sentencing for Smith, who ⁠is out on ‌bail, is scheduled for June. He could ⁠receive up to five years for bribery, up ​to ‌20 years for wire fraud and up ​to 20 ⁠years for the firearms charge, per NBC News.

The firearm count came about because investigators found a gun during their search in the gambling investigation, and he was barring from gun ownership due to a previous felony conviction, according to multiple media ​reports.

–Field Level Media