Feds Release Proof More NBA Players Helped Push Gambling Scandal | KD, & Anthony Edwards Implicated? | HO’

Hold on to your bets, y’all — the NBA’s darkest scandal just exploded wide open.

What started as a few shady rumors about players “throwing games” has turned into a full-blown federal investigation involving NBA stars, coaches, and the freaking mafia.

The FBI just dropped receipts that make the 2007 Tim Donaghy referee scandal look like child’s play.
Now, names like Kevin Durant, Anthony Edwards, Chauncey Billups, and Terry Rozier are floating through federal documents — and the internet is losing its mind.

Operation Royal Flush: The FBI Moves In

The Feds called it Operation Royal Flush, a multi-state crackdown on an illegal gambling and sports-rigging ring that’s been running quietly for years.

Over 30 people were arrested across 11 states, including former NBA coaches and staffers. The operation connected everything from underground poker rings in New York to insider betting leaks straight out of NBA locker rooms.

At a press conference in Manhattan, a DOJ spokesperson laid it out plain:

“This was an illegal gambling and sports-fixing operation that spanned the course of years. It infiltrated professional basketball, casinos, and organized crime networks.”

The four NBA teams hit hardest?

The Lakers, Raptors, Hornets, and Trail Blazers.

The Spark: Terry Rozier’s $8 Million Mistake

According to the indictment, the case started with an IRS tip in 2023, after Charlotte Hornets guard Terry Rozier was hit with an $8 million tax lien.
That same season, Rozier mysteriously “injured” his foot mid-game against the Bucks — after playing just nine minutes.

Later, prosecutors say, Rozier’s associate Dairo Lerr used that insider info to cash out with mob-connected gamblers for $100,000.

The DOJ says Rozier even took a private trip to Philly to collect the money himself.

And once the Feds followed that money trail, they found something way bigger: a full criminal enterprise linking NBA insiders to five of New York’s most notorious mob families — the Bonanno, Gambino, Genovese, Lucchese, and Colombo organizations.

Mob Poker, NBA Players, and a $17 Million Townhouse

It sounds like a movie plot — but it’s all in the federal filings.

Agents raided a $17 million townhouse at 80 Washington Place in Manhattan, once rented by rapper Travis Scott when he was with Kylie Jenner.
After he moved out, that same house allegedly became a mob-run poker den where NBA veterans, rich investors, and mafia enforcers played rigged games with marked cards and hidden cameras.

They found digital wallets, underground ledgers, and poker equipment modified to funnel millions in “laundered” gambling cash.

The initials in those ledgers?

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“CB,” “DJ,” “TR,” and “KG” — believed to stand for Chauncey Billups, Damon Jones, Terry Rozier, and Kevin Garnett.

Prosecutors say at least two retired NBA players lured wealthy guests to those poker nights — without telling them the decks were fixed.

The Arrests Drop: Billups, Damon Jones, and Rozier

When federal agents moved in, Chauncey Billups, Damon Jones, and Terry Rozier were taken into custody.
All three face charges of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and money laundering.

Billups, now head coach of the Portland Trail Blazers, is accused of washing gambling profits through real-estate shell companies.
Jones — once LeBron James’s close friend and assistant coach in Cleveland — is accused of leaking real-time injury info to gamblers.

Text messages in the indictment show Jones warning a betting contact:

“Get a big bet on Milwaukee tonight before the info’s out.”

That same night, LeBron sat out unexpectedly — and the insider bets hit big.

LeBron’s Circle Under the Microscope

Damon Jones’s connection to LeBron is exactly what’s making this case blow up.
They were teammates in Cleveland. Then Jones became part of LeBron’s coaching circle in L.A.

So when his name popped up in the FBI’s wiretap logs, fans immediately started asking the question no one wanted to:

“Is LeBron involved?”

So far, there’s no evidence tying LeBron directly to any betting activity — but the idea that his inner circle was feeding gambling info has the NBA in panic mode.

Even worse? Investigators found betting spikes on FanDuel and DraftKings seconds before Lakers injury news went public — and those accounts are now being subpoenaed.

Kevin Durant’s FanDuel Drama Re-Examined

This is where things get really uncomfortable for Kevin Durant.

Back in 2024, KD got into an online argument with gamblers after a bad game, tweeting:

“When y’all win, you don’t DM me with a cut. When y’all lose, I’m every name in the book.”

At the time, it seemed harmless — just KD being KD.

But now, feds are reviewing FanDuel data from the same period, because Durant was actively promoting betting partnerships while the mob was allegedly manipulating odds.

Investigators don’t believe KD fixed games, but they’re asking if his tweets and “picks” unintentionally moved betting markets that mob insiders exploited.

One agent told reporters off-record:

“Durant’s name keeps showing up because he created volatility. Every time he tweeted, the odds shifted — and someone cashed out.”

Fans are even digging up old clips claiming KD made “coded gestures” to fans in the crowd mid-game.
Conspiracy or not, it’s adding fuel to a fire that’s already burning hot.

Anthony Edwards and the “Fake Injury” Theory

Then there’s Anthony Edwards, one of the league’s brightest stars — and now one of its most suspicious.

Opening night this season, Edwards limped off the court after just three minutes against the Pacers, never to return.
The Wolves still won, but the internet instantly accused him of sabotaging bets.

Within days, the FBI quietly subpoenaed DraftKings and FanDuel for betting data tied to that exact game.

Investigators noticed that several massive “under” bets on Edwards’s minutes were placed from a Miami IP address — the same region tied to Dairo Lerr, the alleged middleman in Rozier’s case.

Now Edwards isn’t officially charged, but the DOJ lists that game under “events of interest.”
The Timberwolves have since banned staff from posting injury info online without legal clearance.

One league source told The Athletic:

“Players are terrified. You can’t even limp anymore without someone screenshotting it and tagging the FBI.”

The NBA’s Nightmare: Operation Royal Flush Goes Public

The league’s response? Full panic mode.

Commissioner Adam Silver held a closed-door meeting with all 30 team executives, instructing them to lock down player communications, medical records, and travel logs.

Publicly, he said the NBA is “cooperating fully with federal authorities.”

Privately, insiders claim the league’s integrity unit warned teams months ago about “unusual betting patterns” — and some ignored it.

If true, that means the NBA may have known long before the arrests that something was rotten.

The Mafia Connection Runs Deep

Court filings reveal that the gambling profits moved through crypto wallets and shell companies, funneling more than $42 million between 2019 and 2024.
Some of that money allegedly came from rigged poker nights hosted by mafia families — the same families now facing RICO indictments.

Investigators say NBA insiders helped launder mob cash through “player prop bets” — wagers on individual performances like points, rebounds, and assists.

In several cases, players allegedly altered their stats on purpose to make sure those bets hit.

One FBI spokesperson said:

“This goes beyond betting. It’s a conspiracy between organized crime and professional athletes to manipulate outcomes.”

Jay-Z’s Roc Nation Caught in the Crossfire

If that wasn’t wild enough, leaked witness notes on Reddit mentioned a Roc Nation talent exec seen at one of the Manhattan poker nights.

There’s no indication that Jay-Z himself is involved, but because Roc Nation manages several NBA stars, the feds are now checking for “financial overlaps” between player accounts and gambling wallets.

That connection has fans spiraling — some claiming the scandal could drag music and sports under the same investigative spotlight.

Congress Steps In

It’s gotten so big that the U.S. Senate Sports Integrity Committee has now requested testimony from Adam Silver and former DOJ prosecutor Kash Patel, demanding to know whether the NBA ignored early warnings.

Lawmakers are calling it “the largest sports-rigging probe since the 1919 Black Sox scandal.”

Translation: this isn’t just a sports story anymore — it’s a national headline.

What Happens Next

Here’s what we know for sure:

Over $42 million in illegal bets moved through mob-linked crypto accounts.

Four NBA teams are officially under review.

At least 30 arrests have been made, with more expected.

The names Billups, Rozier, Jones, and Durant appear in FBI documents.

Anthony Edwards’s injury is being investigated as a “game of interest.”

The Feds say “more names will surface soon.”
If any active All-Stars end up indicted, the NBA’s reputation could be permanently shattered.

Right now, the league’s golden era of “integrity and transparency” looks more like a poker table — and the house always wins.

Final Word

What’s clear is that the line between athlete, influencer, and insider just got dangerously thin.
When one tweet can move betting odds, and one fake injury can shift millions, it’s not just about sports anymore — it’s about trust.

From KD’s FanDuel deal to Anthony Edwards’s limp, from Rozier’s fake injury to Billups’s arrest, every thread connects to the same web: money changing hands where it shouldn’t.

And as the FBI digs deeper, the question isn’t if more names will drop — it’s whose.

Stay tuned, because this game just went into overtime — and the stakes have never been higher.