Utah Great Linked To Gambling Scandal

As the NBA grapples with a high-profile investigation, Malik Beasley faces serious allegations of sports gambling and game manipulation alongside fellow pro Ed Davis.

Malik Beasley has been indicted by federal prosecutors in New York on sports gambling charges, according to Mike Vorkunov of The Athletic, and former NBA center Ed Davis has also been charged.

Beasley’s attorney, Steve Haney, told Omari Sankofa II of The Detroit Free Press that Beasley is facing sports betting, money laundering, and wire fraud charges and that they “look forward to defending all charges.”

The indictment stems from allegations by prosecutors with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York that Beasley and Davis grew close as teammates with the 2020/21 Timberwolves and later worked together to manipulate Beasley’s play in four NBA games for betting purposes while Beasley was with the Bucks during the 2023/24 season.

According to the allegations, Beasley was dealing with gambling losses of about a million dollars and joined the scheme with Davis and three other people, including former NBA agent Paolo Zamorano, in an effort to pay down that debt.

Prosecutors say Davis texted Beasley roughly a month before the first targeted game, a Bucks-Cavaliers matchup on January 26, 2024, writing, “Only way you can beat Vegas is sports betting,” and adding, “Everything else they got the edge.”

The other games identified in the indictment were Bucks-Hornets on February 27, Bucks-Clippers on March 10, and Bucks-Nets on March 21, all in 2024. Beasley scored three points and attempted just two shots in the January 26 game, and investigators say the group wagered thousands of dollars on that contest.

The alleged betting pattern also included prop bets tied to Beasley’s rebounds. The group reportedly backed the “over” on his 3.5 rebound line against the Clippers, then celebrated when he secured his fourth rebound in the closing seconds. But the plan “went awry” in the Nets game, when the group bet the “under” and Beasley finished with six rebounds, Vorkunov reported.

The news lands after a turbulent stretch for Beasley, a high-volume three-point shooter who finished second in Sixth Man of the Year voting in 2024/25 and had been in line for a substantial multiyear deal with the Pistons in free agency. Those talks ended once reports surfaced that federal investigators and the NBA were looking into his possible ties to illegal betting. He later signed with Cangrejeros de Santurce, the Puerto Rican club owned by Bad Bunny, while his NBA future remains unsettled.

The NBA issued a statement through spokesperson Mike Bass, saying, “We are in the process of reviewing the federal indictment unsealed today involving Malik Beasley and Ed Davis. Beasley last played in the NBA during the 2024/25 season and Davis last played in the league during the 2021/22 season.

We will continue to investigate this matter and cooperate with the relevant authorities. We take these allegations with the utmost seriousness, and the integrity of our game remains our top priority.”

Beasley and Davis are the fourth and fifth former NBA players to be indicted in the federal sports gambling probe, joining Terry Rozier, Jontay Porter, and Damon Jones. Porter was permanently banned from the NBA after a league investigation determined he had shared confidential information with bettors, while the other cases remain ongoing.

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