Tuesday, July 14, 2026
Law

Key Figure in Basketball Gambling Scandals to Plead Guilty in Poker Case

A former federal prosecutor tells FOS this isn’t necessarily dire news for Chauncey Billups.

Gavel
USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect

The federal government has secured a major guilty plea in its case regarding an allegedly rigged poker game run by organized crime that ensnared dozens of defendants, including Hall of Fame point guard Chauncey Billups, who has maintained his innocence.

Shane Hennen, a central figure in both cases that erupted last October, will plead guilty to one count of wire fraud conspiracy in the poker case, according to a letter filed by the government Tuesday. The letter notes that 11 other defendants in the case are also “expected” to plead guilty. In total, 19 of the 31 total defendants in the poker case have now either pleaded guilty or agreed to do so. He is also a defendant in the parallel case that alleges gamblers were profiting by betting on NBA games using inside information. Those two cases are playing out in New York.

Hennen is also a key figure in a separate gambling scandal that exploded in January, where federal prosecutors in Philadelphia accused 26 individuals of being involved in a plot to fix NCAA Division I men’s basketball and Chinese Basketball Association games between September 2022 and February 2025. Hennen pleaded not guilty in that case back in February. His attorney in that case did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Tuesday.

In the poker case, prosecutors allege that the defendants, including Hennen, ran an illegal poker scheme during which they lured players to games using celebrities like Billups. The government claims the defendants then used “advanced wireless technologies” including “rigged shuffling machines” to guarantee profits to New York’s “Italian crime families.”

Veteran NBA guard Terry Rozier is a defendant in the other New York case, in which Hennen has not pleaded guilty. There, Rozier and former NBA player and coach Damon Jones are accused of providing inside information to gamblers who then profited by betting. Jones was named in both the poker and inside info cases; in April, he agreed to plead guilty to one count of wire fraud in each. Rozier, meanwhile, says he is innocent and has been trying to continue his basketball career while awaiting trial, but a recent ruling set him back on that front.

The same federal probe that resulted in the arrests of Rozier and Jones also recently ensnared two other former NBA players, Malik Beasley and Ed Davis. Those two, among others, were charged last month in a separate case that does not name Hennen. Beasley pleaded not guilty on July 1, and on Tuesday, Davis did the same.

“There Are Two Worlds Here”

Although Hennen has only agreed to plead guilty in the poker case, his decision to do so likely means the charges against him in the betting case will be dropped, according to Mitchell Epner, a former federal prosecutor who is now a criminal defense attorney at Kudman Trachten Aloe Posner LLP.

Standard operating procedure is that if someone is guilty pursuant to a plea agreement, the agreement will include a paragraph that says other charges will be dismissed after he gets sentenced on the offense covered by the plea, Epner tells Front Office Sports.

“You wouldn’t make a deal to sell half of a house,” he says. “Normally, these things are meant to wrap everything up in one plea agreement.” As a “matter of logistics,” however, the government typically starts with a filing like the one made Tuesday, indicating the defendant will plead guilty in one of the cases.

The Hennen news does not definitively mean he is now going to become a cooperating witness, Epner says, but “there is credit you get for just pleading guilty” because it means the government does not have to put in the time and effort to prove its case.

Meanwhile, his guilty plea is not necessarily dire for Billups. “There are two worlds here,” Epner tells FOS

World one is that Billups knew he was roping people into a rigged game, and now he has to worry that the people running the game are pleading guilty. In that world, Billups would currently be worried that one or more defendants has agreed to cooperate with the government, which means they may provide evidence against him, either through testimony, documents, or something else. 

“That would be a huge problem,” Epner says of Billups’s outlook in that scenario.

World two is that Billups was roping people into a high-stakes poker game, but he did not know it was rigged. 

“If that’s the case, it does not make me more or less nervous if I’m Chauncey Billups,” Epner says. 

Hennen’s attorney in the poker and betting cases did not immediately respond to a request for comment, nor did the attorney for Billups.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Sign up for
The Memo Newsletter

Get the biggest stories and best analysis on the business of sports delivered to your inbox twice every weekday and twice on weekends.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

NBA Execs Split on Where LeBron James Will End Up

James will play a record 24th NBA season. 
February 20, 2022; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; NBA great George Gervin is honored for being selected to the NBA 75th Anniversary Team during halftime in the 2022 NBA All-Star Game at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse.
First at FOS

George Gervin Also Loses Initial Attempt to Trademark Iceman

“There are a lot of Icemens,” IP attorney Josh Gerben tells FOS.
podcast thumbnail mobile
Front Office Sports Today

7/14/26 – World Cup Semis, Michigan AD Probe, FanDuel VIP Scandal

0:00

Featured Today

What the World Cup Means to Erling Haaland’s Tiny Hometown

The tournament’s breakout star is from a rural Norwegian town.
July 10, 2026

Why So Many Media Outlets Are Rushing Into Sports

Sports coverage has ballooned in every corner of media.
Pillow Fight Championship
July 8, 2026

How Obscure Sports Get Mainstream TV Deals

For niche sports, getting on TV often matters more than getting paid.
ATLANTA, GA - September 05: Georgia Lottery fireworks after the game against the Seattle Mariners at Truist Park on Friday, September 5, 2025 in Atlanta, Georgia.
July 2, 2026

Inside the Spectacle and Science of MLB Fireworks

Postgame fireworks are lighting up baseball for America250.
Kansas City Chiefs
July 1, 2026

NFL Teams Push to Turn Futbol Fans Into Football Devotees

NFL teams are courting international soccer fans during their World Cup visits.

The Most Powerful Lawyer in Sports Is Representing Paramount

Kessler is defending Paramount’s merger with WBD against antitrust claims.
May 4, 2017; Columbus, OH, USA; The BYU Cougars against the Long Beach State 49ers at St. John Arena. Mandatory Credit: Joe Maiorana-USA TODAY Sports
July 13, 2026

Why Stephen F. Austin Volleyball Players Are Suing Their School

Both players were cut from the team following the 2025–26 season.
FILE PHOTO: The company logo for Ticket reseller StubHub, is displayed on a screen during the IPO at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., September 17, 2025.
July 14, 2026

StubHub CEO Sued for Ties to Hedge Fund That Resells Tickets

Up to 80% of tickets available on secondary sites are sold by ticket scalpers.
Sponsored

Clase Azul Tequila Founder’s Soccer Ownership

Arturo Lomeli talks about managing a tequila brand and two soccer clubs.
Jan 17, 2025; Miami, Florida, USA; Miami Heat guard Terry Rozier (2) drives to the basket against the Denver Nuggets during the fourth quarter at Kaseya Center. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images
July 8, 2026

Judge Deals Blow to Rozier’s NBA Comeback Bid

Rozier was arrested in October as part of the federal gambling probe.
July 7, 2026

Tennis Civil War Deepens As Two Groups Claim to Be Real PTPA

Dueling lawsuits have plunged a player advocacy group further into chaos.
Mar 19, 2022; Scottsdale, AZ, United States; Victor Evans (26) jumps to dunk the ball at Victorium. Basketball Big3 Tryouts
July 7, 2026

Big3 Fights Lawsuit Over NFTs Amid Plans to Go Public

A Big3 representative says the case is a “classic nuisance suit.”
June 28, 2026

Pro Tennis Rocked by Explosive Lawsuit Over Internal Power Struggle

A bitter PTPA power struggle spills into court.