Malik Beasley has been indicted by federal prosecutors in New York on sports gambling charges, according to a report from Mike Vorkunov of The Athletic. Former NBA big man Ed Davis was also indicted, Vorkunov reported.
Beasley’s attorney, Steve Haney, said his client is facing sports betting, money laundering, and wire fraud charges and that they “look forward to defending all charges.”
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York alleges that Beasley and Davis became close when they were teammates on the 2020/21 Timberwolves and later worked together to manipulate Beasley’s performances in four NBA games for betting purposes during Beasley’s season with the Bucks in 2023/24.
According to prosecutors, Beasley had suffered million dollars in gambling losses and joined the scheme with Davis and three other people, including former NBA agent Paolo Zamorano, to help pay off that debt.
One text message cited by prosecutors came from Davis about a month before the first game involved. In it, Davis allegedly told Beasley, “Only way you can beat Vegas is sports betting,” and added, “Everything else they got the edge.”
The games identified by prosecutors were Bucks/Cavaliers on January 26, 2024; Bucks/Hornets on February 27; Bucks/Clippers on March 10; and Bucks/Nets on March 21. In the January 26 game, Beasley took only two field goal attempts and scored three points, and investigators say the group bet thousands of dollars on that contest.
Prosecutors also say the group bet the “over” on Beasley’s rebounds at 3.5 in the Clippers game and celebrated when he got his fourth rebound in the closing seconds. The plan, however, reportedly “went awry” in the Nets game, where the group bet the “under” on Beasley’s rebounds and he finished with six boards.
An NBA spokesperson, Mike Bass, said the league is reviewing the federal indictment and will keep working with authorities.
“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, a free agent sharpshooter, finished second in Sixth Man of the Year voting in 2024/25 and had been positioned to land a multiyear deal with the Pistons before contract talks ended after reports surfaced that federal investigators and the NBA were looking into a possible link to illegal betting activity. He later signed earlier this year with Cangrejeros de Santurce, the Puerto Rican team owned by Bad Bunny, while his NBA future remains unresolved.
Beasley and Davis are the fourth and fifth former NBA players indicted by federal prosecutors in the gambling probe, joining Terry Rozier, Jontay Porter, and Damon Jones. Porter was permanently banned by the NBA after a league investigation determined he had disclosed confidential information to bettors, while the other cases remain ongoing.
In Other News...
Badgers Recruiting Surge Just Put Them In The Mix Again
Wisconsins recruiting momentum has started to look like something more than an early-class blip. The Badgers already have three commitments in their 2027 group, highlighted by four-star wing Baboucarr Ann, the top recruit in Minnesota and a Rivals top-40 prospect nationally, and that haul has Wisconsin sitting near the top of the national team rankings for the cycle.
The next layer is already taking shape, too, with the staff jumping into the 2028 race by offering Cole Kelly, a top-40 recruit from Illinois. It is another sign the Badgers are trying to stay ahead of the curve and build on the early buzz, even as the real challenge now becomes turning this surge into something that lasts. [Read more 🡒]
Nick Boyd Just Got The Shot Badgers Fans Were Waiting On
Nick Boyds path to the NBA took a little longer than some hoped, but the former Wisconsin guard is still getting his shot. After going undrafted, he has landed in a place where the next stage of his career can actually begin, and for a player whose age and draft status shaped the way teams viewed him, the opportunity matters just as much as the label attached to it.
Boyd now gets a chance to compete for a roster spot in summer league, which is often where undrafted guards have to prove they belong all over again. For Badgers fans, it is another reminder that the route to the league is rarely linear, but it does give Boyd a legitimate opening to show he can stick at the next level. [Read more 🡒]
Badgers Fans Needed This From One Of Wisconsins Biggest Commits
Yahzeen Zion has been one of the more important names in Wisconsins class since his commitment, a highly regarded edge prospect whose rise has given the Badgers a needed boost on the recruiting trail. For a program that has to fight for every high-end pledge, keeping a player with his profile lined up matters well beyond the usual pledge-watch chatter.
The concern, of course, is that these situations rarely feel settled until signing day arrives. Zion has already drawn outside attention, and the kind of recruiting tug-of-war that follows a top commit can turn quickly, which is why any sign of reassurance from him lands so well in Madison as the calendar keeps moving toward the finish line. [Read more 🡒]
