All Content from Business Insider 10月24日 06:22
揭露地下高科技扑克赌局,涉多名NBA球星
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一份联邦起诉书揭露了一个涉及30多人的地下扑克赌博团伙,成员包括黑帮分子和NBA球星。该团伙利用高科技手段,如改装的洗牌机和X光扑克桌,进行作弊,已非法获利超过700万美元。起诉书详细描述了这些地下赌局的运作方式,包括在纽约和长岛等地的豪华场所进行,并雇佣NBA球员作为“门面”吸引富有的赌客。其中,波特兰开拓者队教练昌西·比卢普斯和前NBA球员达蒙·琼斯被指控参与其中。

🕵️‍♂️ **高科技作弊手段层出不穷**:该地下扑克赌局团伙利用了多种高科技手段进行作弊,包括安装了隐藏技术的洗牌机,能够预测牌的顺序;以及配备X光的扑克桌,能够识别牌面。此外,还使用了能读取牌面信息的电子牌托、特制太阳镜和隐形眼镜等,以确保团伙成员能掌握牌局信息并从中牟利。

🌟 **NBA球星被用作“吸睛石”**:为了吸引富有且容易上当的赌客(被称为“鲸鱼”或“鱼”),团伙雇佣了像波特兰开拓者队教练昌西·比卢普斯和前NBA球员达蒙·琼斯这样的知名NBA球员作为“门面”。这些球员的参与被视为一种吸引力,旨在让赌客放松警惕,并相信比赛的真实性,而他们则能从中获得分成。

💰 **巨额非法收益与犯罪家族的联系**:该团伙通过这些作弊手段,已非法获利超过700万美元。起诉书显示,该赌局活动与博纳诺和甘比诺等犯罪家族有关联,他们负责组织和控制部分赌局,并利用威胁和恐吓手段确保赌客支付赌资。部分赌客在单次赌局中就损失了数十万美元。

⚖️ **NBA官方的严肃回应**:对于这些指控,NBA官方表示高度重视,并将比卢普斯和另一名球员特里·罗齐尔置于“留职停薪”状态,强调维护比赛的公正性是其首要任务。目前,相关部门正在对涉案人员进行逮捕和审判。

Chauncey Billups, the coach of the Portland Trail Blazers, was accused of taking part in a criminal poker ring.

Rigged shuffling machines, bodyguards named "Big Bruce" manning the door, and shadowy rooms in Las Vegas and East Hampton. It sounds like scenes from "Ocean's 11" or a James Bond movie.

These details were buried in a 22-page federal indictment unsealed in Brooklyn on Thursday that accused more than 30 defendants of wire fraud, operating illegal gambling businesses, and money laundering conspiracy. The case offers an inside look at the high-tech, high-stakes world of underground gambling operations that continue to thrive despite the proliferation of online betting.

The "highly sophisticated and lucrative fraud scheme" started in 2019 with weekly poker games that targeted wealthy people in posh neighborhoods of New York City and beyond.

There was the "Lexington Avenue Game," which was largely controlled by the Bonanno crime family and took place in an apartment building where a penthouse is available for $30,000 per month. The indictment said the Gambino crime family ran the "Washington Place Game" — referring to a Greenwich Village brownstone that sold last year for $17 million and had been featured in "Keeping Up with the Kardashians."

Conspirators with nicknames like "Flappy" and "Pookie" organized the games, hiring high-profile NBA names like Portland Trailblazers coach Chauncey Billups and former NBA combo guard Damon Jones as "face cards" to "lure" in unsuspecting victims, often called whales or fish, the feds said. These NBA stars were referred to as "Face Cards," slang for someone with an attractive face, and would get a cut of the proceeds "in exchange for their participation in the scheme."

Damon Jones, center, was allegedly used to lure in victims to the rigged poker games.

According to court documents, the tactic worked. One victim was so "star struck" that he "acted like he wanted Chauncey to have his money," one defendant texted. For a different game, Billups was paid $50,000, the documents said; Jones, who texted that he "needed it bad," requested a $10,000 advance for another game.

The stakes were high — generating more than $7 million in winnings, with one victim coughing up $1.8 million during a single Lexington Avenue game in the summer of 2023, the indictment alleged. Two men from an East Hampton game that also took place in the summer of 2023 lost $105,000 and $46,500, while a Miami victim lost $60,000 in September 2024, the feds said.

X-Ray tables and specialty glasses

The NBA on Thursday said it placed Billups and Terry Rozier, a defendant in a separate but related case, on leave. "We take these allegations with the utmost seriousness, and the integrity of our game remains our top priority," the NBA said in a statement.

Lawyers for the defendants either couldn't be reached or didn't return requests for comment. They are expected to be arraigned starting on Thursday at courthouses across the country as arrests were made in various cities, including Orlando and Portland, Oregon.

Many of the games were straight — illegal, sure, because the mob collected proceeds as the house — but not rigged. The rigged ones are where the cinematic technology came in.

The most common cases relied on bugged shuffling machines. Thanks to concealed technology — supplied by defendants with nicknames "Black Tony," "Black Rob," "Sugar," and "Curt" — the shufflers could read the cards in the deck and predict which player had the best hand. That information was relayed to out-of-state operators, like Sugar, who would then communicate it by cellphone to an associate at the poker table, known as the "quarterback" or "driver," according to the feds. The driver would use a secret signal — tapping their chin or touching their wrist to their arm, for example — to let those in on the scheme know who had the winning hand, and the game would unfurl from there, court documents said.

Machines to shuffle cards.

Other rigged games relied on electronic poker chip trays that could read the cards placed on the table using hidden cameras, poker tables made with X-ray technology, "card analyzers" that could communicate, via decoy cellphone, which cards were on the table, and decks of cards marked with symbols only visible to those wearing specially designed sunglasses or contact lenses, the indictment said.

An X-ray poker table.

Threats, intimidation, and money laundering

At times, they would lose on purpose, texting each other from the table on the best ways to avoid suspicion.

"Guys please let him win a hand he's in for 40k in 40 minutes he will leave if he gets no traction," one defendant known as "Big Mikey" texted in September 2024.

But usually, the outcome was a win for the cheating team.

What came next was comparatively low-tech. Members of the Bonanno, Gambino, and Genovese crime families would use old school "threats and intimidation" to make sure victims paid up, the indictment alleges.

"U sent a bunch of goons to solve your problems," one victim texted, after he was assaulted by one of the defendants.

The money collected was wired to shell companies run by "Doc," who would launder it and return it in the form of cryptocurrency or cold hard cash, the indictment said.

This is one of two federal cases facing Sugar, Jones, and another defendant known as Spook.

Brooklyn federal prosecutors also brought a case Thursday that accused numerous current and former NBA players of an altogether different kind of gambling ring — one that relied on faked injuries and insider knowledge to make fraudulent online bets.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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地下扑克 NBA 昌西·比卢普斯 达蒙·琼斯 犯罪团伙 高科技作弊 非法赌博 Underground Poker NBA Chauncey Billups Damon Jones Crime Ring High-Tech Cheating Illegal Gambling
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