An FBI investigation into #NCAA basketball corruption was hailed as a watershed moment in college sports.
But records offer new details about the lead agent’s role and an investigation that focused on lesser-known coaches and middlemen, most of them Black latimes.com/california/sto…
Times reporter @nathanfenno examined thousands of pages of court testimony, intercepted phone calls, text messages, emails and performance reviews.
The records provide a look inside the probe, led by a veteran FBI agent whose conduct landed him on the wrong side of the law.
The investigation was the top priority for the New York FBI’s public corruption squad for almost a year, according to lead agent Scott Carpenter's performance review in 2017, and included two undercover agents and operations in at least eight states.
FBI agents arrested 10 men, including assistant coaches from USC, Arizona, Auburn and Oklahoma State.
Prosecutors alleged the coaches took bribes and that Adidas representatives funneled money to lure players to colleges the company sponsored.
But almost six years later, the operation that was supposed to expose college basketball’s “dark underbelly” didn’t transform the sport.
No head coaches or administrators were charged.
There wasn’t a public outcry.
Instead, the government rounded up low-level figures for alleged wrongdoing — particularly the coach bribery scheme —that many said wasn’t a common practice until the FBI started handing out cash.
A new study found that Angelenos who drive more tend to be exposed to less air pollution — and those who drive less tend to be exposed to more pollution.
L.A. County's shameful history of tearing apart certain communities to make ways for freeways has resulted in worse air quality for residents of those neighborhoods, according to a new study latimes.com/environment/ne…
USC researchers’ examination of driving patterns, commute distances and pollution paints a clear picture of environmental injustice.
In addition to the link between air quality & miles driven, non-white communities face higher pollution across the board latimes.com/environment/ne…
At the start of the corruption trial of suspended Los Angeles City Councilmember Mark Ridley-Thomas, jurors on Wednesday heard conflicting portraits of the onetime power broker.
Defense attorneys cast Ridley-Thomas as a lifelong public servant who represented the poorest communities of L.A. & relied on USC, the largest private employer in his district, to help meet the social & health needs of his most vulnerable constituents.latimes.com/california/sto…
But to federal prosecutors, Ridley-Thomas was a conniving operator eager to “monetize” his position and conceal a sexual harassment investigation into his son, Sebastian, then a state Assembly member. latimes.com/california/sto…
The creation of KBLA as a Black-owned and themed station represents another sort of return for Tavis Smiley. When he first reached audiences coast to coast, it was as a regular guest with African American themed programs. latimes.com/california/sto…
First came Tom Joyner’s morning talk radio program and then Smiley’s own show on TV’s BET. “I went from the Blackest media outlets in America, to the whitest networks in America” — NPR and PBS, Smiley said with a smile.
Eviction cases in Los Angeles County never fully stopped in the pandemic, but they slowed to a few hundred filings a month. Since May, as protections have lifted, they’ve returned to pre-pandemic levels of more than 3,000 per month.
Kyle Nelson, a postdoctoral researcher at UCLA who has been compiling the numbers, expects they will increase even more, to about 5,000 per month, as protections continue to expire. latimes.com/california/sto…
Leticia Graham’s case is similar to the type of case that Nelson and others believe will flood the courts — renters who fell thousands of dollars behind on rent during the pandemic and don’t earn enough money to pay it back. latimes.com/california/sto…
AAU coach Skip Robinson remembers the moment Bones Hyland met Marcus Morris Sr.
Because a middle-schooler challenging an NBA player 11 years his senior, before so much as saying hello, isn't easily forgotten. latimes.com/sports/clipper…
“[Bones] like came out from the back and he was like, long, scrawny, like he didn’t say much,” Morris recalls.
Said Robinson: “Bones wouldn’t shake his hand until Marcus agreed to play him one-on-one.” latimes.com/sports/clipper…
On the air, Tavis Smiley appears unimpeded by the controversy. He has been able to interview and/or win support from a broad array of individuals, including Mayor Karen Bass, U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff, rap superstar Snoop Dog, and Pete Buttigieg among others. latimes.com/california/sto…
“Tavis is like a force of nature in the Black community,” said civil rights attorney Connie Rice, a longtime LAPD reform activist. “He carries his own gravity and he’ll attract a network of leaders and thinkers.” latimes.com/california/sto…
It has not been lost on Smiley that other prominent media figures accused of sexual harassment — such as PBS’s Charlie Rose and NBC’s Matt Lauer — have failed to find a way back to the public stage. latimes.com/california/sto…