The Booty Report

News and Updates for Swashbucklers Everywhere

Avast, ye scurvy dogs! 2 NBA scoundrels be facin' time in the brig for trickin' the NBA benefit plan!

2023-11-16

Arrr, 'tis a sorry tale indeed, me hearties! Glen "Big Baby" Davis and Will Bynum, two landlubber NBA players, be now guilty as sin for their wicked doings in the realm o' fraud. They did dare to deceive the noble NBA's insurance and benefits plan, aye! Walk the plank, ye scurvy dogs!

Two former NBA players are facing jail time for their roles in a scheme that defrauded an insurance plan for NBA players and their families of more than $5 million. Glen "Big Baby" Davis was found guilty of health care fraud, wire fraud, conspiracy to make false statements, and conspiracy to commit health care and wire fraud. Will Bynum was also included in the case. Eighteen players, in which NBA vet Terrence Williams was the ringleader, defrauded the NBA's Players' Health and Welfare Benefit Plan. Keyon Dooling and Alan Anderson were sentenced to 30 months and 24 months in prison, respectively, as they recruited other former NBA players to defraud the plan by submitting false invoices by medical officials. "Williams led a scheme involving more than 18 former NBA players, a dentist, a doctor, and a chiropractor, to defraud the NBA Players’ Health and Welfare Benefit Plan of millions of dollars," U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said in a statement back in August 2022. "Williams also impersonated others to help him take what was not his — money that belonged to the Plan." More than 20 people have been convicted in the case, many of them one-time NBA players. "Today's conviction exemplifies that despite notoriety or success in sports or any other field, no one is exempt from criminal charges if they engage in fraud," Williams said in a statement on Wednesday. Davis was a member of the NBA champion 2008 Boston Celtics team. He also played for the Orlando Magic and Los Angeles Clippers. Bynum, 40, played for the Celtics, Golden State Warriors and Washington Wizards. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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