Government attorneys, involved in the federal prosecution of manipulated poker games that has implicated NBA Hall of Famer Chauncey Billups and ex-NBA player Damon Jones, declared in a document presented on Tuesday their anticipation of offering official plea accords to 12 of the 31 accused individuals. They also expressed being “quite hopeful” of securing such agreements with an additional nine before the matter proceeds to court.
Every respondent is mandated to attend a procedural review concerning the legal action at the federal courthouse on Wednesday.
Subsequent to the last procedural review on November 24, the accused have had the opportunity to examine every piece of proof pertaining to the matter, all of which has been subjected to a confidentiality directive by the judiciary.
Within their filing lodged Tuesday, the prosecution indicated that the proof encompasses on-person video recordings, documentation regarding the accused individuals’ apprehensions, digital data confiscated from seven electronic devices and Apple iCloud accounts; more than 100,000 pages of monetary documents and call logs; over 800 pages of observational images; and elevated camera video from 147 Lexington Avenue in Manhattan, which served as one of the venues where the alleged fixed gambling occurred.
Authorities have additionally furnished roughly seven terabytes of digital information from specific accused individuals’ digital gadgets and cloud storage accounts, all of which was confiscated at the time of their apprehensions in October.
Since his apprehension, Billups has been on an unsalaried, managerial absence from his position as chief mentor for the Portland Trail Blazers. In November, he entered a plea of innocence concerning the allegations of illicit fund channeling and electronic deception leveled against him.
Confidantes revealed to ESPN that he has resided in the Denver region since his liberation on a $5 million bond.
