NEW YORK — Miami Heat guard Terry Rozier 's lawyers are asking a judge to throw out sports gambling charges that have kept him off the court this season, arguing that the government overreached by turning a private dispute over bettors' use of non-public information into a federal case.
In a motion to dismiss made public on Tuesday, Rozier's lawyers argued that the government's theory of the case — that he prevented sportsbooks from making informed decisions about accepting certain bets — runs afoul of a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling that narrowed the federal wire fraud statute.
Rozier, 31, is accused of helped gamblers cash in by tipping off a friend that he would leave a March 2023 game early because of a supposed injury. The friend, Deniro ''Niro'' Laster, who is also charged, shared or sold the information to others, who placed more than $250,000 in prop bets, prosecutors said.
''The government has billed this case as involving ‘insider betting' and ‘rigging' professional basketball games," Rozier's lawyers, James M. Trusty and A. Jeff Ifrah, wrote in the motion. "But the indictment alleges something less headline-worthy: that some bettors broke certain sportsbooks' terms of use against wagering based on non-public information and ‘straw betting.'"
Rozier was on the Charlotte Hornets at the time and the information about his early exit was not listed on the team's injury report, nor was it shared with the public or the sportsbooks that accept wagers on NBA games and player performances, prosecutors said.
Rozier pleaded not guilty in federal court in Brooklyn on Dec. 8 to wire fraud conspiracy and money laundering conspiracy charges. He was released on $3 million bond and is due back in court for a hearing before U.S. District Judge LaShann DeArcy Hall on March 3.
His charges were part of a sweep of more than 30 other people in a takedown of two sprawling gambling operations: one that authorities said leaked inside information about NBA athletes and another involving rigged, Mafia-backed poker games.
The charges have raised questions about the integrity of NBA games in an era of legalized betting and myriad prop bets, prompting the league to tweak its injury reporting requirements.