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Which BMR and "Across the Street" Guys were part of this?

BMR Genie

BMR Genie

Joined
Jun 16, 2016
Messages
43,259
"One sportsbook wrote in the documents that several bettors had potential links to the syndicate and referenced Marves Fairley, a Mississippi man who sells betting picks online, as "the main syndicate suspect." When reached by ESPN, Fairley denied any involvement."

--> oh wow! They even have the name.
 

phillyflyers

phillyflyers

Joined
Aug 8, 2024
Messages
9,341
To the people here who will say you ain't shocked by this...

I say how can yous be such hypocrites?

Yous are the same people who ridicule me when I say all these leagues are fixed.

These leagues are, in fact, fixed in some way, shape, or form.

Always have been, always will be.

When you have hundreds of billions of dollars pouring in every year, year after year, on these games....there is bound to be a group of people looking to control that wealth.

Usually it's Jews.

I know, I know. I'm a racist who's totally out of line.

Or am I being honest and telling the truth?

Who makes up the vast majority of owners of these sports teams?

Then who is usually the commissioner of these leagues?

Then who are the general managers of these teams?

Vast majority are jews.

Why and how is that when jews make up 2% of the entire population of the country?

Then you expand it out even further...

Who runs the banks and financial systems?

Who runs the judiciary?

Who are the lawyers and attorneys?

Who's buying our politicians?

Jews.

I stand by this 100%.

I'm not afraid to tell the truth under any circumstances.

I am the way I am.
 
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jamesy2422

jamesy2422

Joined
Jun 1, 2025
Messages
1,986
What games James?
College Basketball

Game 1:
The first alert issued in this period, however, named a program that the NCAA has not mentioned -- Stony Brook. On Dec. 1, 2024, IC360 received a report from a sportsbook about unusual betting interest on Norfolk State to cover the first-half spread against Stony Brook, the documents show.

A betting account that had been "relatively dormant" placed nine $300 bets on Norfolk State to cover the first-half spread, one sportsbook said. At another sportsbook, customers opened new betting accounts to make their first wagers for "excessive amounts" on Norfolk State, according to the documents. Additionally, betting accounts that the sportsbook believed were linked to each other continued to bet on Norfolk State, even after the line had moved to a less advantageous number. The sportsbook halted wagering on the game, the records show. Norfolk State led 34-27 at halftime, covering the spread.

Game 2:

Three weeks after the Norfolk State-Stony Brook game, a group of bettors arrived at Harrah's Gulf Coast casino in Biloxi, Mississippi, on Dec. 21, 2024, with tens of thousands of dollars. In a span of 45 minutes, the bettors placed a series of large bets on two games: $2,500 and $1,700 on Tulsa to cover the 26-point spread against Mississippi Valley State, according to the records. Some of the bettors attempted to wager $20,000 on Tulsa but were denied. They also bet $4,000, $3,500 and $2,200 on Wright State to cover the spread in the first half against Eastern Michigan, the records show. All the bets were easy winners.

Game 3:

In January, the suspicious wagering continued, this time against North Carolina A&T, the records show. In Mississippi, a BetMGM customer placed two big wagers on Elon to cover the spread in the first half of a Jan. 2 game against North Carolina A&T: a $1,200 bet on Elon to cover the 3.5-point first-half spread and a $5,000 two-leg parlay on Elon -3.5 in the first half and Tennessee State -2.5. The bettor cashed out the parlay at 9:25 p.m. ET for $5,300 after Elon covered the first-half spread while Tennessee State was trailing, according to the records. The user had only one previous wager close to that size, BetMGM noted.

Game 4:

Gamblers also targeted Eastern Michigan, beginning with the Wright State game in December. On Jan. 7, 2025, a bettor tried to place a $10,000 wager on Toledo to cover the first-half spread against Eastern Michigan at the Fitz Casino and Hotel in northern Mississippi, according to the documents. The book allowed him to wager only $5,000, which paid out $9,348. He then went to the nearby Gold Strike Casino to make a $9,000 bet against Eastern Michigan, records show.

On the other side of the state, at the Beau Rivage Casino in Biloxi, two customers wagered $12,000 against Eastern Michigan on the first-half spread and a third put down $10,000, according to the documents. Toledo finished the first half up 46-33, covering the spread.

More Games:

The records show gamblers also bet against New Orleans in four games: McNeese State on Dec. 28, Vanderbilt on Dec. 30, Texas A&M-Corpus Christi on Jan. 6 and Southeastern Louisiana on Jan. 11. Four New Orleans players were suspended from the team in late January, reportedly for alleged gambling violations.

In Mississippi, a BetMGM customer placed three wagers totaling $2,750 on McNeese State to cover the spread against New Orleans, according to the records. Previously, the patron had very few wagers on college basketball and was observed significantly raising his bet amount multiple times on McNeese State to cover, wagering $250 then $1,000 and $1,500, a BetMGM representative wrote.
 

JDS

JDS

Joined
Dec 11, 2021
Messages
56,717
To the people here who will say you ain't shocked by this...

I say how can yous be such hypocrites?

Yous are the same people who ridicule me when I say all these leagues are fixed.

These leagues are, in fact, fixed in some way, shape, or form.

Always have been, always will be.

When you have hundreds of billions of dollars pouring in every year, year after year, on these games....there is bound to be a group of people looking to control that wealth.

Usually it's Jews.

I know, I know. I'm a racist who's totally out of line.

Or am I being honest and telling the truth?

Who makes up the vast majority of owners of these sports teams?

Then who is usually the commissioner of these these leagues?

Then who are the general managers of these teams?

Vast majority are jews.

Why and how is that when jews make up 2% of the entire population if the country?

Then you expand it out even further...

Who runs the banks and financial systems?

Who runs the judiciary?

Who are the lawyers and attorneys?

Who's buying our politicians?

Jews.

I stand by this 100%.

I'm not afraid to tell the truth under any circumstances.

I am the way I am.

 

Wagerallsports

Wagerallsports

Joined
Mar 6, 2018
Messages
72,985
He's been at ESPN for long time it seems.

Here's a video from spring 2024 on Dan Patrick.
Yes he has

I used to interact with him on Twitter he is good about answering people's questions

At least he was back when the battle for sports betting legalization was going on he covered it very well
 
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