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re: Former LSU and U-High Basketball Legend Glen Davis sentenced to 40 months in Prison
Posted on 5/9/24 at 1:37 pm to 225Tyga
Posted on 5/9/24 at 1:37 pm to 225Tyga
Just saw that. From Law 360:
Law360 (May 9, 2024, 2:25 PM EDT) -- Former Boston Celtics forward Glen "Big Baby" Davis was sentenced to 40 months in prison Thursday after being convicted for his role in a scheme to submit fraudulent invoices to an NBA healthcare plan.
During a hearing in Manhattan federal court, U.S. District Judge Valerie E. Caproni said Davis, known for his role on the Celtics' 2008 championship team, was more culpable than many of the other defendants charged in the sprawling case.
Judge Caproni additionally ordered Davis to serve three years of supervised release and pay $80,000 in restitution jointly with his co-defendant Rashad Sanford, an Atlanta-area chiropractor who pled guilty to conspiring with Davis in a separate fake-invoice scheme.
Judge Caproni said she recognized that Davis had a very difficult childhood, citing his mother's drug dependency and a period during which Davis lived with a coach. The judge told Davis, "I feel bad for you" in regard to his NBA career that was cut short by an injury and said Davis, like many of the other 19 former players charged in the case, was financially irresponsible with the millions he made playing professional basketball.
But Judge Caproni said those circumstances did not let Davis off the hook.
"You say you don't deserve to be here. I disagree," she said.
"He knew he had been caught, and what did he do? He lied," Judge Caproni said.
Davis appeared visibly upset throughout the hearing and was asked more than once by his attorney to refrain from talking. After the hearing concluded, Davis sarcastically applauded the court staff as they exited the courtroom and told Assistant U.S. Attorney Ryan Finkel he had done a "great job."
Davis' attorney, Sabrina Shroff, declined to comment on the sentence.
Relatives, coaches, friends and the National Basketball Players Association's general counsel Ron Klempner wrote letters to the court in support of Davis' requested non-custodial sentence. Shroff argued that the letters showed that Davis is "slow on the uptake," a continuance of Davis' defense used at trial that he was taken advantage of by Williams.
Shroff said she had represented Davis longer than an ordinary attorney-client relationship would last, and in that time he had shown, at least to her, a difficulty with running his own life, at one point calling her late at night to ask her to lend him money to pay a phone bill.
Shroff said Davis' childhood was marred by adversity. Hs relatives described him as a child wandering the neighborhood in dirty clothes, looking hungry, the attorney said. Klempner, Shroff said, has said his interactions with Davis have been "vastly different" than those with other players.
In a tearful statement to the court prior to the sentence, Davis apologized to the judge for being before her and asked for her help.
"For five or six years I've been struggling because basketball was taken away from me," Davis said. "When I lost basketball, I lost myself."
Judge Caproni said she was not pleased with Davis' pre-trial behavior, noting that he'd traveled out of state without telling the probation department, provided an incomplete financial disclosure to the court and had tested positive for marijuana use "many times."
"You always had very dramatic facial reactions, I can see why you have a [Screen Actors Guild] card," Judge Caproni told Davis.
eta:
Law360 (May 9, 2024, 2:25 PM EDT) -- Former Boston Celtics forward Glen "Big Baby" Davis was sentenced to 40 months in prison Thursday after being convicted for his role in a scheme to submit fraudulent invoices to an NBA healthcare plan.
During a hearing in Manhattan federal court, U.S. District Judge Valerie E. Caproni said Davis, known for his role on the Celtics' 2008 championship team, was more culpable than many of the other defendants charged in the sprawling case.
Judge Caproni additionally ordered Davis to serve three years of supervised release and pay $80,000 in restitution jointly with his co-defendant Rashad Sanford, an Atlanta-area chiropractor who pled guilty to conspiring with Davis in a separate fake-invoice scheme.
Judge Caproni said she recognized that Davis had a very difficult childhood, citing his mother's drug dependency and a period during which Davis lived with a coach. The judge told Davis, "I feel bad for you" in regard to his NBA career that was cut short by an injury and said Davis, like many of the other 19 former players charged in the case, was financially irresponsible with the millions he made playing professional basketball.
But Judge Caproni said those circumstances did not let Davis off the hook.
"You say you don't deserve to be here. I disagree," she said.
"He knew he had been caught, and what did he do? He lied," Judge Caproni said.
Davis appeared visibly upset throughout the hearing and was asked more than once by his attorney to refrain from talking. After the hearing concluded, Davis sarcastically applauded the court staff as they exited the courtroom and told Assistant U.S. Attorney Ryan Finkel he had done a "great job."
Davis' attorney, Sabrina Shroff, declined to comment on the sentence.
Relatives, coaches, friends and the National Basketball Players Association's general counsel Ron Klempner wrote letters to the court in support of Davis' requested non-custodial sentence. Shroff argued that the letters showed that Davis is "slow on the uptake," a continuance of Davis' defense used at trial that he was taken advantage of by Williams.
Shroff said she had represented Davis longer than an ordinary attorney-client relationship would last, and in that time he had shown, at least to her, a difficulty with running his own life, at one point calling her late at night to ask her to lend him money to pay a phone bill.
Shroff said Davis' childhood was marred by adversity. Hs relatives described him as a child wandering the neighborhood in dirty clothes, looking hungry, the attorney said. Klempner, Shroff said, has said his interactions with Davis have been "vastly different" than those with other players.
In a tearful statement to the court prior to the sentence, Davis apologized to the judge for being before her and asked for her help.
"For five or six years I've been struggling because basketball was taken away from me," Davis said. "When I lost basketball, I lost myself."
Judge Caproni said she was not pleased with Davis' pre-trial behavior, noting that he'd traveled out of state without telling the probation department, provided an incomplete financial disclosure to the court and had tested positive for marijuana use "many times."
"You always had very dramatic facial reactions, I can see why you have a [Screen Actors Guild] card," Judge Caproni told Davis.
eta:
This post was edited on 5/9/24 at 1:41 pm
Posted on 5/9/24 at 1:40 pm to CBDTiger
If this dude wasn't '6"9 and good at hoops, he'd have been in Angola long ago
Posted on 5/9/24 at 1:47 pm to CBDTiger
quote:
Assistant U.S. Attorney Ryan Finkel
Posted on 5/9/24 at 1:49 pm to CBDTiger
quote:
Davis appeared visibly upset throughout the hearing and was asked more than once by his attorney to refrain from talking. After the hearing concluded, Davis sarcastically applauded the court staff as they exited the courtroom and told Assistant U.S. Attorney Ryan Finkel he had done a "great job."
Seems like an entitled prick who thinks he’s been “wronged” by the system.
Unless I’m missing something, dude played in the NBA for 8 years with $33M in career earnings. Nobody to blame but himself
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