Co-defendant Christian Dawkins testified Thursday he didn’t
think it was a crime to pay players during the college basketball corruption
case.
“You can’t defraud a school,’’ he said. “I don’t even know how
that’s possible . . . It’s ridiculous,’’ he said.
Dawkins also suggested he didn’t think it was a smart investment
to pay assistant coaches to bribe players to become clients of his fledgling
sports marketing company, claiming he was pressured to do so by Jeff D’Angelo, the
pseudonym for an FBI undercover agent posing as an investor.
“It’s just wasting money,’’ he claimed. “It was stupid.’’
But federal prosecutor Robert Boone painted a radically
different picture of the 26-year old Dawkins as a hustler and con artist and
had previously been accused of charging $42,000 in Uber costs to an NBA player’s
credit card, which caused the NBA Players Association to send a letter about
Dawkins to its members and agents.
Dawkins, who was working as a runner for agent Andy Miller
at the time, previously testified several people at ASM Sports were using his Uber
account and the player was reimbursed.
Then, prosecutors played a surveillance tape in March 2016
when Dawkins traveled from Atlanta to Columbia, S.C. with alleged co-conspirator
Munish Sood and disgraced former financial planner Marty Blazer, who both have
since become cooperating witnesses for the government, to meet with then-South
Carolina assistant Lamont Evans about future NBA player PJ Dozier.
During the recording,
Dawkins says, “You need to be in bed with somebody like that so you can have
complete access to the kid.
Prosecutors also played audio recording from June 6, 2017,
meeting on a yacht in Battery Park where Dawkins, Sood and D’Angelo signed an
agreement to launch their new company in which they talked about setting up
meetings with assistant coaches in during a travel team tournament in Vegas to implement
plans to steer players to their agency in exchange for cash.
Last October, Dawkins was among three men convicted of
federal criminal charges related to a pay for play scheme to steer recruits to
Adidas sponsored programs like Kansas, Louisville and NC State.
Closing arguments in the case start Friday and will wrap up Monday when the case will go to the jury.
Dick Weiss is a sportswriter and columnist who has covered college football and college and professional basketball for the Philadelphia Daily News and the New York Daily News. He has received the Curt Gowdy Award from the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame and is a member of the national Sportswriters Hall of Fame. He has also co-written several books with Rick Pitino, John Calipari, Dick Vitale and authored a tribute book on Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski.