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Alabama Scandals; Logan Young; textbooks

Late afternoon update - nothing earth shattering.

Cash withdrawals are main topic in Young trial

By Gary Parrish
Contact
January 25, 2005

The prosecution has continued putting on its case this afternoon, spending the past several hours detailing each cash withdrawal from Logan Young’s checking account and each cash deposit into Lynn Lang’s checking account during the time the two were allegedly conspiring to get Albert Means to Alabama.

Deborah Kines, of Trust One Bank, went through each withdrawal from Young’s checking account, a total of 64 equaling $291,000. As of 3:45, Marie Woodson, of Union Planters Bank, was still detailing each deposit going into Lang’s checking account.

Young is charged in the criminal trial with paying Lang to ensure his star recruit, Albert Means, played for the Crimson Tide, among other things.

Earlier in the afternoon, the prosecution indicated it would be finished putting on its case when court is adjourned this afternoon. The defense is expected to begin either late today or first thing Friday morning.

Local Tennessee fan Roy Adams made his first official appearance in the case this morning.

A Wednesday night post on an Internet message board that caters to Tennessee fans, under the screen name "TennStud", detailed the day’s happenings, as posts have since this trial began. Among the things written were that TennStud had drinks after court adjourned with media members and jurors.

Defense attorney Jim Neal asked judge Daniel Breen to send a marshal after Adams to have him brought to the Clifford Davis Federal Building downtown to address this issue. Judge Breen declined, but when Adams arrived shortly before jurors were brought in, he was summoned to the podium and asked about this post.

Adams acknowledged that he does post under the name "TennStud," and that no one else used that name. However, he denied having contact with any juror and said that someone must have edited his post after he finished.

When the jury was brought in, Judge Breen asked if any of them had spoken with anybody about the case. They each indicated that they had not.
 
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Prosecution rests and defense asks for acquittal.

Prosecution rests; defense says acquit

By Gary Parrish
Contact
January 28, 2005

The prosecution rested its case against Logan Young late Thursday, and the defense immediately asked for a judgment of acquittal.

Judge Daniel Breen will rule this morning. If the motion is granted, Young will be exonerated from a four-count indictment that charges he paid former Trezevant football coach Lynn Lang $150,000 to ensure Albert Means enrolled at Alabama.

"There is no proof in the record that there was a law prohibiting Lynn Lang from doing what he did," argued defense attorney Robert Hutton. "The government never had anybody testify that it is illegal for a high school coach to take money to recommend to a player where to go to college."

As an example, Hutton used University of Memphis basketball coach John Calipari and his agreement with adidas.

Hutton argued that Calipari is an employee of the state and a public official, and that he takes money from adidas for making his players wear adidas products.

So if that's not a crime, Hutton asked, why is it a crime for a high school teacher who is a public official (Lang) to take money from a Crimson Tide booster (Young) for making his player (Means) go to Alabama?

"This case is a frightening case," Hutton said. "Where does it end? Why couldn't Mr. Calipari be indicted? Why couldn't adidas be indicted?"

Hutton's motion capped a day of testimony featuring bank and phone records that seemed to have the jury drifting in and out of attention.

Aware this might happen, the prosecution prefaced this part of its case by telling jurors that the document introduction might get tedious. At any rate, Asst. U.S. Atty. Fred Godwin moved forward with the underlying theme being if the government can't show the actual fire, it can at least present a lot of smoke.

For instance, Godwin presented bank records belonging to Lang and Young from June 1999 to November 2000.

In that span, Young had 64 cash withdrawals totaling $291,050. Meanwhile, Lang made $47,269.99 in cash deposits, which did not include his paychecks from Memphis City Schools.

To wrap its case, and summarize it, the government called John Ford III, an FBI financial analyst who found 13 instances when a significant withdrawal was taken from Young's account and a significant deposit was put into Lang's account on the same or the next business day.

One example showed Young withdrawing $9,000 on April 13, 2000, and $4,000 on April 14, 2000. Lang made a cash deposit of $8,000 on April 14, 2000.

During cross examination, defense attorney Allan Wade asked a simple question.

"Is there any evidence that any of that money (in Lang's account) came from Logan Young?"

"No," answered Ford.

One of the lingering questions from Wednesday's testimony was why there were no records of phone calls between Young and Lang before June 2000. On Thursday, the prosecution produced witnesses to explain.

Lavonne Westbrooks, a BellSouth compliance assistant, testified that her company keeps records of local calls for "between 59 and 62 days." So because BellSouth answered an FBI subpoena on March 3, 2001, it was only able to produce records of Young's local calls dating to about Jan. 1, 2001.

FBI intelligence research analyst Cathy Williams testified she had Lang's cell phone records from Sprint, which indicated dozens of calls to Young from June 2000 to February 2001. But before March 2000, Lang had a Cricket phone for which no records could be obtained.

So, as Godwin pointed out, there is no way to tell if there were no calls or many calls between Young and Lang before March 2000.

-- Gary Parrish: 529-2365
 
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Afternoon update. Trial is in recess until Monday morning. Short blurb at the end about Donnan testifying this afternoon.

A motion for a judgment of acquittal pending in Young trial

By Gary Parrish
Contact
January 28, 2005

As the Logan Young trial adjourned for the weekend, a motion for a judgment of acquittal was still pending and the defense’s attempt to discredit Lynn Lang under way.

"I’m going to let you go home for the weekend," Judge Daniel Breen told jurors at 12:18 Friday afternoon. "I’ll ask you to be back here at 9:45 Monday morning."

The defense opened its case at about 10 a.m., just after Breen allowed the prosecution to re-open its case in order to allow former Supt. Johnnie B. Watson to testify Lang had no right to accept money for steering Albert Means to Alabama.

The defense's first witness was former Alabama assistant Ivy Williams, who testified that, contrary to Lang's testimony, he never advised the former Trezevant High coach Lang to get someone to take Means's ACT. The strategy for the defense, as will be the case through next week, was to impeach Lang's testimony and create a reasonable doubt as it pertains to his credibility.

However, on cross examination Asst. U.S. Atty. Fred Godwin attacked Williams's credibility.
Godwin took Williams's NCAA and grand jury testimony, and found multiple inconsistent statements. Godwin then got Williams to acknowledge speaking by phone to Young more than 200 times in 1999-2000, but he denied ever discussing recruiting.

"So you were the recruiting coordinator of Alabama, and Mr. Young is a big Alabama fan, and you talked several hundred times but you never discussed any recruitment of any player?" asked Godwin.

"No," answered Williams. Then he offered an explanation.
"My mom was really ill in 1999," Williams said. "We could've been talking about that."

Former Georgia coach Jim Donnan also took the stand. He testified that he never paid Lang any illegitimate money, but acknowledged Lang asked for SUVs and cash while Donnan and an assistant visited Trezevant in January 2000.

"(Lang) definitely had his hand out," Donnan said. "I told my assistant that we were out of here."
 
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goodguy said:
Yeah, that is who I meant. There's a name from the past, I forgot all about him. I think he coached at Memphis, which makes sense as to why he was recuiting Means.
Stobart-he was a WR coach for the Bengals. He might have coached under Coop as well, not sure on that one.
 
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The NY Times has started reporting the events of this trial. Where is ESPN?

Former Georgia Coach Witness in Trial
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Published: January 28, 2005

Filed at 7:18 p.m. ET

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -- Former Georgia coach Jim Donnan told a jury Friday that he never offered money to a high school coach to try and get a commitment from his star football player.

Lynn Lang, the former head coach at Trezevant High School, testified earlier this week that he got offers of money and other perks from several schools before he accepted a $150,000 payoff from Memphis millionaire Logan Young to steer Albert Means to sign with Alabama in 2000.

Lawyers for Young, on trial on federal bribery and money laundering charges, called up Donnan and several other witnesses to poke holes in Lang's testimony. They also asked Judge Daniel Breen to throw out the charges against Young.

Lawyer Robert Hutton said the government failed to show that Lang was a public servant under state law or that his official duties prohibited taking money to influence a student's choice of a college. Breen said he would rule on the defense request when trial resumed Monday.

During testimony Friday, Donnan said he broke off discussions on Means when Lang started talking about wanting expensive cars. Lang previously testified that he got $700 cash from Donnan.

Donnan said Georgia gave Lang a $500 check for taking part in a football camp, and gave Means $194 to cover expenses for an NCAA approved visit.

``That's the only money that I'm aware of and we've got the canceled checks to prove it,'' Donnan said.

After his testimony, Donnan said in a courthouse hallway that he and several other coaches talked among themselves about the need for an NCAA review of recruiting at Alabama, including Means' signing.

The other coaches, he said, included Phillip Fulmer of Tennessee; Steve Spurrier formerly of Florida and now with South Carolina; Houston Nutt of Arkansas and former Mississippi coach David Cutcliffe, now an assistant at Notre Dame.

``We weren't for sure what happened,'' Donnan said. ``We were just talking about the need for it to be investigated.''

Donnan lost his job at Georgia in 2000.

Ivy Williams, a former assistant coach at Alabama, also denied suggesting that Means get a stand-in to take his college entrance exam before signing with the Crimson Tide. Lang said he was referred to Young by Williams, who suggested that Means have someone else take the entrance exam for him.

Means has acknowledged in court that he did not take the exam himself and lied about it to a federal grand jury.

Williams said he helped recruit Means in 1999 and was told he had already taken the exam.

Means stayed at Alabama for one football season before transferring to Memphis after reports of a payoff to Lang became public.

Alabama's recruitment of Means became part of an NCAA investigation that led to sanctions in 2002 depriving the team of scholarships and bowl eligibility.

Williams and Ronnie Cottrell, another assistant coach who lost his job at Alabama after the investigation, have filed a $60 million defamation lawsuit against the NCAA over the investigation.

Donnan Testifies
 
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Price of recruit: 'At least' an SUV

I know this related to the 'bama scandal thread but,

http://www.twincities.com/mld/pioneerpress/10763571.htm?1c

Price of recruit: 'At least' an SUV
A Memphis, Tenn., recruit's high school football coach wanted "at least" an SUV in return for the player's signature, former Georgia coach Jim Donnan testified Friday in federal court.

Donnan said that's when the Bulldogs stopped pursuing Albert Means, whose well-publicized 2000 recruitment is the subject of an Alabama booster's federal racketeering trial.

Donnan's testimony came in the fifth day of the trial of Memphis millionaire Logan Young, who is accused of paying former Trezevant High School coach Lynn Lang $150,000 to make sure that Means signed with Alabama.

Alabama was charged with NCAA recruiting violations in the Means case and eventually received sanctions that included a loss of scholarships, plus a two-year ban from bowl participation.
 
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For a braek from the insanity of recruiting to the sublime of buying recruits, the judge denies the defense motion for acquittal. The defense continues to call its witnesses this afternoon.

Judge denies acquittal in Young trial

By Gary Parrish
Contact
January 31, 2005

Judge Daniel Breen ruled this morning to deny a defense motion for a judgment of acquittal in the trial against Logan Young.

The defense had argued that there was no law stating that former Trezevant High coach Lynn Lang could not take money to advise a player to go to college somewhere.

"This is a criminal case, and my client is facing jail time," said defense attorney Robert Hutton. "The crime has to be clear. At the time it wasn’t clear. It may be clear now, but it wasn’t clear then."

Breen ultimately disagreed and allowed the case to proceed.

The defense is expected to begin calling witnesses soon, among them former University of Memphis coach Rip Scherer and Richard Ernsberger, author of the book, "Bragging Rights."
 
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Closing Arguments to Begin This Afternoon

The testimony phase of this trial is over. Former Michigan State asst. coach Brad Lawing testified as a prosecution rebuttal witness that he did have a conversation with the high school coach about the price for Means. Damn I can't wait for the next trial to begin.

Closing arguments expected in Young trial

By Gary Parrish
Contact
February 1, 2005

All testimony in the Logan Young trial has been heard, and closing arguments are expected to begin this afternoon.

After concluding its redirect of David Pearson, Young’s CPA for two decades, the defense rested at a little after 10 this morning. The prosecution called one rebuttal witness, former Michigan State assistant Brad Lawing. Lawing testified that he met with Trezevant High football coach Lynn Lang one on one on Jan. 18, 2000, concerning the recruitment of Trezevant defensive tackle Albert Means.

Lawing testified that Lang asked for $200,000 cash, $50,000 of it up front, and the other $150,000 would be due on national signing day. Lawing said he asked Lang if he had already received $50,000, and Lang said, "Yes." He asked, "What school gave it to him?" Lang answered, "I can’t tell you, but if you don’t get into the game, you’ll find out on national signing day."

Means, one of the premier defensive tackles in the country that year, signed with Alabama on national signing day. Lang has admitted accepting $150,000 from Young, a longtime Alabama booster, who is on trial for conspiracy, bribery and structuring a financial transaction to evade reporting requirements.

For the rest of the morning, the two sides will argue about jury instructions. The jury is scheduled to report back at 1:15.
 
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The defense had argued that there was no law stating that former Trezevant High coach Lynn Lang could not take money to advise a player to go to college somewhere.

"This is a criminal case, and my client is facing jail time," said defense attorney Robert Hutton. "The crime has to be clear. At the time it wasn’t clear. It may be clear now, but it wasn’t clear then."
correct me if im wrong here... but didn't he all but say his client was guilty right there?

i can see espin's headlines already if this guy is convicted.

tOSU not the only dirty program!
 
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That argument was presented in the defense motion for acquittal. These arguments are made outside of the presence of the jury. The attorney is not admitting that his client paid the high school coach. What he is arguing is that there is a violation of substantive due process because assuming that a payment was made, there was no law prohibiting the activity at the time the alleged payment was made. My guess is that the booster is found guilty.
 
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LightningRod said:
That argument was presented in the defense motion for acquittal. These arguments are made outside of the presence of the jury. The attorney is not admitting that his client paid the high school coach. What he is arguing is that there is a violation of substantive due process because assuming that a payment was made, there was no law prohibiting the activity at the time the alleged payment was made. My guess is that the booster is found guilty.
aha! i didn't realize there would be no jury to hear it. nevermind says me.
 
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Jury Deliberations Begin Feb 2

Closing arguments have been completed, and the jury begins its deliberations tomorrow morning. For all the boosters out there, take notice, if you can't do the time, don't do the crime.

Jury deliberation begins tomorrow in Young trial

By Gary Parrish
Contact
February 1, 2005

Closing arguments in USA vs. Logan Young were made late Tuesday, and the final word, coming via the prosecution’s rebuttal, was direct and loud.

"If justice isn’t for everybody, it is for no one," said prosecutor Jerry Kitchen. "Justice is coming for Logan Young."
With that, the jury was released for the day. It will return Wednesday morning - on National Signing Day - and, after instructions, begin deliberating until a verdict is reached.

Young, 64, is accused of paying former Trezevant High coach Lynn Lang $150,000 for having Albert Means enroll at Alabama in 2000.

He’s charged with conspiracy, bribery and structuring a financial transaction to evade reporting requirements. If convicted, the longtime Alabama booster could face 15 years in prison and a $900,000 fine.

Lang testified last week that he received the money from Young, and is scheduled to be sentenced next week. In a roughly 50-minute closing, the defense again labeled him a liar, and hinged the case on that claim.

"I’ll just put it to you straight-forward," said defense attorney Jim Neal. "If you believe Mr. Lang beyond a reasonable doubt, then you have to convict Mr. Young. But if you don’t believe Mr. Lang beyond a reasonable doubt, then you cannot convict my client.

"I submit you cannot believe Mr. Lang."
 
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Logan Young Found Guilty

Let the games begin.

Logan Young found guilty

By Gary Parrish
Contact
February 2, 2005

A jury of seven women and five men found Memphis businessman Logan Young guilty on all counts this afternoon in his federal court case.

Young, an Alabama booster, was alleged to have paid former Trezevant High football coach Lynn Lang $150,000 to steer defensive tackle Albert Means to Alabama. Young was found guilty of conspiracy, bribery and structuring a financial transaction to evade reporting requirements.

The jury began its deliberations around 10 this morning after receiving instructions from Judge Daniel Breen.
 
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