Jalen Smith’s guilty plea in a sprawling point-shaving scheme that infected college basketball games underscores the escalating threat of gambling corruption, with over 39 players implicated and millions wagered, raising urgent questions about sport integrity ahead of March Madness.
The first guilty plea in a massive NCAA basketball point-shaving scheme has been entered by Jalen Smith, a Charlotte, North Carolina man who trained players and recruited them into the betting scam. Smith pleaded guilty to wire fraud and bribery charges in federal court, becoming the initial defendant among 26 charged to do so, as prosecutors detailed an operation that spanned multiple seasons and involved hundreds of thousands in bribes.
The scheme’s scale, as confirmed by Associated Press reporting, is staggering: more than 39 players from over 17 NCAA Division I men’s basketball teams were involved in rigging or attempting to rig at least 29 games during the 2023-24 and 2024-25 seasons. Fixers like Smith paid players typically between $10,000 and $30,000 per game to underperform, then placed bets against their teams, defrauding sportsbooks.
Smith’s role was hands-on; prosecutors said he often traveled to meet players to deliver cash payments by hand. In one instance, he journeyed to Louisiana to arrange the delivery of about $32,000 in cash to two players charged in the scheme. The operation began with two games in the Chinese Basketball Association in 2023, as detailed in the indictment, and after initial success, recruiters like Smith expanded to NCAA games, with the last fixed contest occurring in January 2025.
This scandal is not isolated; it reflects a broader trend following the 2018 U.S. Supreme Court decision that legalized sports betting nationwide, leading to a meteoric rise in wagering [Associated Press]. The ease of betting has coincided with an increase in corruption cases across sports, but the penetration of college athletics—where student-athletes are susceptible to financial pressure—is particularly alarming.
Historically, point-shaving scandals have plagued college basketball, most notably the 1978-79 Boston College scandal that resulted in prison sentences and tarnished the sport’s reputation. The current scheme, however, leverages modern betting platforms and sophisticated recruitment networks, making it more pervasive. Players often recruited teammates to cooperate by playing badly, sitting out, or keeping the ball away from non-involved players to prevent scoring. Sometimes the attempted fix failed, meaning the fixers lost their bets, prosecutors noted.
For fans, the implications are dire with March Madness just days away. The tournament sees billions in wagers, both legal and illegal, and the revelation that active players were involved—four were still on teams this season—casts a shadow over the competition’s integrity. Prosecutors named more than 40 schools where games were allegedly targeted, including major programs like Tulane University and DePaul University. Rigged games included playoffs such as the first round of the Horizon League championship and the second round of the Southland Conference championship.
Two of the players charged have already been banned by the NCAA for their roles [Associated Press], including former University of New Orleans player Dae Dae Hunter, who said on ABC’s “Good Morning America” that he participated to get money to care for his child. Such personal narratives highlight the human element behind the corruption, often driven by financial desperation.
Smith’s legal woes extend beyond the betting scheme; he also pleaded guilty to a separate weapons charge stemming from an FBI search of his North Carolina home last May where agents found a loaded handgun in a hamper. The gun had been reported stolen, and Smith was prohibited from possessing it due to a prior drug conviction in 2018. His lawyer, Rocco Cipparone, stated that Smith pleaded guilty to “get the matter behind him” and move forward positively, a decision made independently of others’ potential pleas.
With Smith’s plea, the pressure intensifies on the remaining 25 defendants. The case exposes systemic vulnerabilities in college athletics amid the betting boom, where the allure of quick money can compromise athletic integrity. As the investigation unfolds, the NCAA and schools must confront how to safeguard their sports without stifling legitimate opportunities for athletes in an era of legalized gambling.
For the fastest, most authoritative analysis on breaking sports news, trust onlytrustedinfo.com to deliver the insights that matter, cutting through the noise to explain why it all matters.