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Alabama Scandals; Logan Young; textbooks

strohs said:
Guilty huh, what are the odds it actually appears on ESPN?
Maybe we should set up a vBet (I need to recoup my JG losses!)
Hope they make the odds real long - Cal's Bowl loss, and JG's recruiting saga wiped all but a measly 25...

I'd make a prediction but my track record suggests you bet the other side of whatever I choose...

:!
 
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http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2005/football/ncaa/02/02/bc.fbc.recruitingscanda.ap/index.html

Young convicted in recruiting trial
Posted: Wednesday February 2, 2005 3:42PM; Updated: Wednesday February 2, 2005 10:10PM

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -- A federal jury convicted millionaire businessman Logan Young on Wednesday of paying $150,000 to get a top football recruit for Alabama.

The jury deliberated for about 5½ hours before returning the verdict.

Young, 64, was convicted of conspiracy to commit racketeering (by breaking state bribery laws), crossing state lines to commit racketeering and arranging bank withdrawals to hide a crime.

Young could receive prison time and a large fine. No date was scheduled for sentencing.

The charges carry a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison, but federal guidelines would call for a much lighter sentence.

While the jury convicted Young on three criminal charges it still was undecided on a "forfeiture count," common in racketeering convictions, that would require Young to pay the government $150,000, the amount of money used in the conspiracy.

The jury was told to return Thursday to make that decision. In the meantime, U.S. District Court Judge Daniel Breen left a gag order he issued at the beginning of the trial in place, barring the prosecution and defense from talking with the media.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Fred Godwin, the chief prosecutor for the trial, asked Breen to set a "substantial" cash bond for Young while he awaits sentencing.

Breen rejected that request, saying Young does not present a flight risk. Young has remained free awaiting trial without bond since his indictment in October 2003.

Defense lawyers described Young during the trial as a heavy drinker who boasted about Alabama football and routinely made large cash withdrawals from his bank accounts.

Godwin also asked Breen to order Young to refrain from drinking while awaiting sentencing, but the judge instead told him to avoid "excessive" alcohol use.

The highly publicized recruitment case coincidentally ended in jurors' hands on college football's National Signing Day.

Defense attorneys used closing arguments to highlight a history of lying by the government's chief witness.

But prosecutors said bank and phone records bolstered the testimony of former high school head coach Lynn Lang.

Lang testified that Young gave him a series of cash payments below the $10,000 threshold for IRS reporting to get highly recruited defensive lineman Albert Means to sign with Alabama in 2000.

Lang told jurors he received money from two other colleges, Georgia and Kentucky, and offers of cash, jobs or other incentives from Arkansas, Memphis, Mississippi, Michigan State and Tennessee.

Former coaches Rip Scherer of Memphis and Jim Donnan of Georgia, and former Alabama assistant Ivy Williams testified for the defense that Lang was lying.

Lang has pleaded guilty to conspiracy in Means' recruitment and is cooperating with prosecutors as he awaits sentencing.

Defense lawyer James Neal told the jury that Lang lied to the NCAA, Memphis school officials and others before testifying against Young.

Godwin introduced telephone records showing numerous calls between phones belonging to Lang and Young.

He also put on testimony about a series of cash withdrawals from Young's bank accounts, some only a day apart and totaling more than $270,000. Bank records also showed cash deposits by Lang of more than $47,000.

Means, who has not been accused of wrongdoing, also testified for the prosecution. He admitted that someone else took his college entrance exam for him, an idea that Lang said came from Williams, and that he let his high school coach pick his college for him.

Means spent a year at Alabama before transferring to Memphis when reports of payoffs to Lang became public.

Alabama's recruitment of Means became part of an NCAA investigation that led to sanctions in 2002, depriving the Crimson Tide of scholarships and bowl eligibility.
 
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The high school coach receives probation with a small fine.

Feb 8, 5:48 PM EST

Former prep coach sentenced to probation

By WOODY BAIRD
Associated Press Writer

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -- A high school football coach who accepted $150,000 from an Alabama booster to steer his standout football player to the Crimson Tide was sentenced Tuesday to two years' supervised probation and 500 hours of community service.

Lynn Lang was also fined $2,500 after pleading guilty to conspiring to get defensive lineman Albert Means to sign with the Crimson Tide in 2000. He could have faced 30-37 months in federal prison and fines up to $60,000.

Lang, former head coach at Trezevant High in Memphis, said he took the money from wealthy businessman Logan Young to make sure Means went to Alabama.

Young, a longtime Alabama booster, was convicted last week on federal charges of conspiracy, bribery and money laundering. He is scheduled for sentencing in May.

Lang testified against Young as a condition of the guilty plea, which led to dismissal of extortion and bribery charges.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Fred Godwin said in court that Lang's cooperation was key to convicting Young.

"Without Mr. Lang, this case could not have gone forward because there was no other witness to the bribe," he testified.

Lang told U.S. District Court Judge Bernice Donald he regretted the pain he caused Means, his family and those at his former school.

"I made a big mistake. ... I'm totally sorry for it," he said.

Means' recruitment became part of an NCAA investigation that led to sanctions against Alabama in 2002. Alabama lost scholarships and was banned from bowls for two years.

Means, who was not accused of wrongdoing, played one season at Alabama before transferring to Memphis, where he expects to graduate in the fall.

Former Tide assistants Ivy Williams and Ronnie Cottrell lost their jobs during the NCAA investigation and are suing the organization for defamation.

The crime to which Lang pleaded guilty, crossing state lines as part of racketeering conspiracy, does not demand forfeiture of the bribe money.

Lang was required to amend his income tax returns, however, and told the court he still owes the IRS more than $60,000 he is paying off in installments.

He testified at an earlier court appearance that he spent the money from Young.

© 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy Policy.
 
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Convicted Bama Booster Logan Young found dead

This should make the over-zealous major boosters take notice. Albert Means went to Alabama for 1 year, then transferred to Memphis and finished his college career last season. His recruitment was a big reason Bama got hit with a serious probation in 2002.

si.com

Young gets six months in prison
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -- A former Alabama football booster convicted of bribing a high school coach to get a top recruit for the Crimson Tide was sentenced Monday to six months in prison.

Logan Young, 64, also was sentenced to six months home confinement after his release from prison and two years' supervised release.
U.S. District Court Judge Daniel Breen is allowing Young to remain free pending appeal.

Young said he was not upset that his chief accuser, former high school football coach Lynn Lang, pleaded guilty and avoided a jail term.

"I don't have a problem with that," Young said as he left the federal courthouse. "I'm happy with what I got."

Young said he believes his lawyers have a good chance of overturning the conviction on appeal.

Defense lawyers have argued since Young's trial began that he was wrongly charged for violating a state law. They said a high school coach has no official authority to tell an athlete where to attend college, meaning Young could not have bribed Lang.

Young's lawyers contended he needs a kidney transplant and could not get proper medical care in prison. Assistant U.S. Attorney Fred Godwin said the government wanted a prison term for Young of 24 to 30 months.

Defense lawyer James Neal said Young could have been sentenced to a fine, probation, house arrest or a combination of alternatives other than prison.

Defense lawyers gained some ground Monday with Breen declining to find that the player at the center of the scandal was a "vulnerable victim," a status that could have meant a longer prison term for Young.

Breen had continued the hearing Thursday after defense arguments focused on an interview by The Commercial Appeal in which Lang claimed the family of the player, defensive lineman Albert Means, got part of the payoff money.

Defense attorney Robert Hutton argued Monday that Means wasn't hurt by the scheme.

Pointing to the player's testimony that his coach arranged for another person to take his college entrance exams, Hutton said, "As a result of this conspiracy, he was able to attend college."

Assistant U.S. Attorney Fred Godwin told the judge that even if Means' family got some money, "that doesn't change Albert Means age, it doesn't change that he was a senior in high school."

Breen had given defense attorneys permission to subpoena Lang for the hearing, but they didn't and the former coach wasn't in court.

Lang said Young paid $150,000 to get Means to sign with Alabama five years ago. In the newspaper article, Lang said the Means family got about $60,000.

The NCAA has said Means was unaware his football talents were being brokered. Means refuses to talk about Lang's allegations.

Young was convicted in February of racketeering conspiracy and bribing a "public servant." He also was convicted of structuring bank withdrawals to hide a crime, a conviction for which his jury ordered a forfeiture of $96,100.

Lang testified at Young's trial that other universities, including Georgia, Kentucky, Arkansas, Memphis, Mississippi, Michigan State and Tennessee, offered him money or jobs to get Means.

No charges were filed against anyone with those schools. Three former coaches, Rip Scherer of Memphis, Jim Donnan of Georgia and Ivy Williams, an Alabama assistant, testified Lang was lying.

Means' recruitment became part of an NCAA investigation that led to sanctions against Alabama in 2002, costing the Crimson Tide scholarships and bowl appearances.

Lang, the former head coach at Trezevant High in Memphis, lost his job because of the recruiting scandal and now lives in Michigan.

He testified against Young while waiting to be sentenced on a guilty plea to crossing state lines as part of a racketeering conspiracy. Prosecutors supported Lang's request to avoid prison and he was sentenced to two years probation and 500 hours of community service.

Means transferred to Memphis after one season at Alabama and finished his college eligibility last season.

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link

1/12/06


Another look into this SEC mess.....

By Mike Fish | ESPN.com </REMOVEONPRINT>
MEMPHIS, Tenn. -- The all-mighty NCAA nailed his beloved Alabama football program. Heck, even the feds made a case of his slipping 150 grand to the coach of a Memphis schoolboy stud. Slave trading, Tennessee faithful on their moral horses call it. Though maybe what we have here is simply a scandalous, juicy glimpse into that good ol' Southern college football tradition, long flavored with a dose of cheatin'.
Let the zealots from Tennessee and Alabama judge the sinners and their misdeeds. All we'll swear to is this being the real deal, the absolute first moneyed college booster sentenced to the big house for NCAA rules bustin'. That and overspending on a marginal Memphis-bred defensive tackle, Albert Means.
Meet the big-talking booster who's sat atop the NCAA's list of suspicious characters for the better part of three decades, longer probably than anyone else: Logan C. Young Jr.
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Since the days when Joe Namath was quarterback, Logan Young has been perhaps 'Bama's most influential booster.​


Name doesn't ring a bell, you say? Well, if you live in SEC Country where college football is a 365-day-a-year topic of conversation at the local Waffle House, in law offices and around corporate boardrooms, you damn well know the legend of Logan Young. Heard his name bandied about on sports talk radio from Little Rock, Ark., to Lexington, Ky., often linked to 'Bama's recruiting. And the tales of his hanging with college coaches, most notably the late Paul "Bear" Bryant, whom, the story goes, valued the gregarious Logan as a close ally and drinking buddy.
So, was Coach Bryant's old chum set up for the ultimate booster fall? Did Tennessee coach Phillip Fulmer, fuming over getting beat on top players in Memphis, call upon a handful of Vols loyalists to dig up the goods on Young and then hand them over to Southeastern Conference and NCAA investigators, ultimately leading to charges being brought by the U.S. Attorneys office in Memphis?
Heck, yeah. That doesn't pardon Young, nor should it necessarily wipe away a pending six-month prison gig. Yet while sullying a rival program or its coach has turned trendy of late (think Larry Eustachy and Iowa State, Mike Price and Alabama, Rick Neuheisel and Washington), what went down here is rife with enough dark conspiracy and shadowy characters to carry a slam-bang John Grisham suspense novel.
Catch the images: A private eye under contract to the SEC casing Logan Young's house, waiting curbside for a chance to sift through his pea-green trash bin. The NCAA enlisting at least 11 secret witnesses, led by Fulmer and his booster buddies. Fulmer warning the SEC that one of his boosters is "a queer."
Lest we forget the NCAA hierarchy, those guardians of academic integrity, cutting a deal for Means to leave Alabama and immediately become eligible at the University of Memphis. Means just missed playing for Rip Scherer, who happened to be a secret witness in the case against Alabama before he was fired as Memphis' head coach. And, in something of a first, the NCAA never questioned Mean's eligibility even though his former Trezevant High coach laid out how he paid a teammate $30 to take the college entrance exam for Means.
All this wonderful theater going on while authorities hunted and eventually shut down perhaps college football's most notorious fan. And the irony is Young never set foot in a Tuscaloosa classroom. Vanderbilt was his school, though he never graduated.
"Logan Young got the bad end of the deal," the sympathetic wife of a secret witness told ESPN.com. "This guy was a target. ... Maybe they thought he was cheating on some players. Maybe he was, but when someone's life is altered it is wrong. It went too far."
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Security will be on guard around Phillip Fulmer when the Tennessee coach leads his Vols into Tuscaloosa on Saturday.​


And so the page turns on what promises to be another wacky chapter Saturday when Tennessee visits Bryant-Denny Stadium for the first time since word leaked of Fulmer's role in the NCAA case. Tennessee might have supplanted Auburn as Alabama's biggest rival. Officials say that this might be the hardest ticket to come by in stadium history. Uniformed sideline security guards around Coach Fulmer promise to be on full display in Tuscaloosa, but, hey, that's a Saturday ritual with Southern football coaches, anyway.
Fulmer, surely, will be a target of scorn by Alabama fans, who caught wind of his involvement in the investigation since the Vols came to town two years ago. In a statement to NCAA investigators, which surfaced as part of discovery in a lawsuit filed by two fired Alabama assistant coaches, Fulmer casts Young as "Bryant's bagman." In a confidential memo to then SEC Commissioner Roy Kramer, Fulmer went so far as to suggest Young "was connected to the Mafia," advising: "I don't know if he is or not, or how far he would take retaliation, but I can't operate my program with that jerk buying players from under our nose!"
Mafia, death threats and what an old Alabama coach terms the college game's "most unhealthy rivalry." As you might expect, the fallout runs deep:
• The storied Alabama football program was spared the NCAA "death penalty," only to be hit with five years probation, a two-year bowl ban and the loss of 21 scholarships.
• Two Alabama assistant coaches lost their jobs -- though they are fighting back in the courts.
• Three Alabama boosters were officially "disassociated" by the university.
As for Logan Young, the most prominent of those three boosters, Alabama officials stuck a lifetime ban on him and pulled his 24-seat skybox (price tag: $40,000) after he came under investigation for illegal recruiting in 2000. Logan says he hasn't been back since, except to spend time with old Sooners coach Barry Switzer at the Oklahoma game in 2003.
The good Lord willing, he'll prop himself up and watch the game on a TV from his bed at Methodist Hospital Central, where he underwent kidney transplant surgery Thursday morning. He might be wearing a hospital gown that ties in the back like everyone else, but he'll be recuperating in a two-room suite, with a TV tuned to the game in each room.
Young, who turns 65 in November, might be watching Alabama from behind bars next year. Once he has sufficiently recovered from his surgery, it's off to federal prison for six months, unless his conviction for bribing a "public servant" is overturned on appeal.
"For Your Eyes Only!!!"
On a dreary Friday afternoon in late September, Young answered the door of his English Tudor home in an exclusive neighborhood bordering the Pink Palace Museum, looking frail in a beige knit golf shirt and gray slacks that hung loosely from his belted waist. He appeared shorter than expected for such a powerful dealmaker, maybe 5-foot-8 or 5-9, with near perfect Jimmy Johnson hair. And, of course, there are gentle reminders of his 'Bama allegiance (the late-model Jaguar is white, however). The shiny, crimson No. 12 Alabama helmet -- signed "Joe Willie Namath" -- on the kitchen counter. The memorabilia scattered about his first-floor office, set off by a large photo of Logan and Coach Bryant that is hung on the wall.
Young leads the way to his spacious, second-floor bedroom. This is where he watches his sports on a large-screen TV. Where, according to former Trezevant High coach Lynn Lang, the two periodically huddled, beginning in 1999, for the payments on Means -- routinely $9,000 dispensed in $100 bills.
300young_bryant.jpg

Paul "Bear" Bryant, a longtime friend of Young's father, became a father figure to Logan when his dad passed away in 1971.​


Now, Logan is sifting through piles of records and statements used in the NCAA case against him, seeing some for the first time. His mood runs from bursts of laughter to outbursts of rage. No matter the weight of evidence or the jury ruling against him, Young rambles on and on about his innocence. And he swears Alabama could have torpedoed the NCAA case, if only the school had investigated and fought the charges against him.
But most of his venom is spewed at Kramer, the old SEC boss, Fulmer and a band of Memphis-bred UT boosters. Guys like local Democratic Party operative, real estate developer and UT trustee Karl Schledwitz and wealthy businessman Duke Clement, for whom the last four digits of his home phone number spell "VOLS." And yes, Roy "TennStud" Adams, one-time president of the UT Alumni Association and a Young rival known for posting what he calls "street-talk" on a popular Tennessee fan Web site.
"I think they're jealous as hell of Alabama, always have been over the national championships and SEC championships," begins Young, leaning forward in his thick, cushioned seat. "I mean they won 13 SECs and Alabama has won 21. The fact that Coach Bryant used to come up here and see me, and I'm friendly with a lot of coaches."
"If you ask me," Young begins again, "Schledwitz was just looking for some kind of political publicity. I'm sure Fulmer asked him to get involved. I mean Fulmer directed the investigation. All because Alabama recruited a couple players in Tennessee and he blamed me for buying them, and it is a lie. He said I bought them. I mean he goes [into] Alabama and gets players. That is OK. But if he loses players over here, somebody paid for them."
Logan is right about at least one thing: Fulmer piqued Kramer's interest enough to kick the SEC office into an investigative mode, and later lined up potential witnesses to chat up lead NCAA investigator Rich Johanningmeier. All of this is clear from an exhaustive paper trail of documents uncovered in a lawsuit that offers a rare glimpse into the underbelly of an NCAA probe.
In faxes (at least six, between April 13 and Sept. 16, 1998) to the SEC commissioner, Fulmer lays out how Alabama allegedly is busting the rulebook. The documents, typed on Tennessee football letterhead, are variously labeled "Confidential" and "For Your Eyes Only!!!" Each cover sheet is addressed to "Coach Kramer."
Kramer forwarded the information to ex-FBI agent Bill Sievers, then under contract to the conference, who in turn hired a private eye to work the case in Memphis. It is apparent Fulmer was frustrated and consumed by Young. In a memo to Kramer, Fulmer rehashed Young's ties to the late Bear Bryant, offering up phone numbers, addresses and points of contact in a who's who of players Young allegedly bought -- "usually defensive linemen that are black and poor."
"[Young] is very wealthy and often drinks a lot and brags about his boys he gets to go to Alabama," Fulmer wrote to Kramer.
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Roy Adams is perhaps better known as "TennStud," the handle he uses when posting gossip on UT fan Web sites.​


With assets worth $14 million, Young could afford to sink $1 million into his legal defense team, which was led by former Watergate prosecutor James Neal. Born into money, Young inherited Osceola Foods. By the mid-1980s, he and his partners split $25 million after selling a local Pepsi-Cola bottling operation. As owner of the USFL's Memphis Showboats, Young brought professional football and former UT standout defensive end Reggie White to his hometown.
Young was a well-heeled booster, but not much better off than UT rival Duke Clement, whose estate was valued at $5.3 million in a divorce settlement last December. Like Young, he inherited the family business, belongs to the Memphis Country Club and is a member of a couple of hunting clubs. He, too, has been known to drink to excess, at least according to his ex-wife, who graphically described his raucous, frat boy behavior in divorce filings.
In a tape-recorded interview with NCAA investigators, Clement described himself as "personal friends" with Coach Fulmer, then set out to define the lifestyle of Logan Young. He reveled in the story of Young hiring a limo one night to cart Clement and his wife, along with Young's then-girlfriend, to the Horseshoe Casino in nearby Tunica, Miss. Told of Young winning 25 grand in less than an hour at the blackjack table. Talked about a dinner party where Young, fueled by J&B and water, bragged on end about recruits he'd bought.
"He always says, 'I learned from the master,' " Clement said after being granted secret witness status by the NCAA. "I ask him, 'What are you talking about?' He said, 'The Bear taught me how to do it.' He said, 'I learned from the master.' ... He's cussin' and he's sayin', 'I'm so much smarter than that NCAA. They'll never catch me.' "
Unbeknownst to Young, SEC gumshoes already had tailed him to places like The Grove Grill and Folk's Folly, assigned to "observe Young at his hangouts and overhear conversations." Among the gems uncovered in the detailed investigative reports was news that when the scotch kicks in, Young "will begin to shout 'Roll Tide' and/or sneeze."
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Thanks to a July 26, 1999, memo from his ex-FBI agent, Commissioner Kramer also knew that Mean's high school coach, Lynn Lang, had put his services up for bid -- at least six months before Means signed with Alabama. UT assistant Pat Washington called the investigator to say Lang had told him it would take a house and a car for Means' mother, plus 50 grand for Lang and something for his assistant, Milton Kirk.
In a memo to Kramer, the SEC investigator recommended using the UT assistant as bait: "We have the opportunity to have Washington tape record his conversations and have law enforcement authorities prosecute Lang. ... I believe it will put a stop to high school coaches soliciting money from SEC coaches."
Kramer nixed the idea, yet never warned Alabama officials to be careful dealing with Lang. Whether the SEC alerted other conference schools about Means' coach is unclear, and Kramer recently declined comment when asked about it by ESPN.com. What's certain, however, is that the SEC no longer hires private investigators after Mike Slive succeeded Kramer in 2002.
"Again, it's not so complicated to put together what happened here if you look at how Fulmer used Kramer to get Alabama," says Montgomery-based attorney Tommy Gallion, who represented Alabama assistant coaches Ronnie Cottrell and Ivy Williams, who were fired for their part in recruiting Means. "They knew about Albert Means. They let Alabama fall into the trap."
"I'll pay you $50 if you'll sing Rocky Top"
Almost nine months after Young's conviction on bribing a high school coach, the UT boosters who were party to his demise don't see what all the complaining is about. Logan C. Young Jr. is a convicted felon -- case closed. Move on. They did their jobs, and have no regrets.
When a visitor showed up at Roy Adams' house for one of his recent Saturday football parties, the amiable host was eager to catch up on his old drinking buddy. Told that Young continues to swear he didn't buy a soul, Adams called across the room to Chuck Cole, another Tennessee booster who played a part in Young's demise: "Chuck, you're not gonna believe this -- Logan still says he's innocent."
Laughter erupted in a domino path around a room littered with UT fans and friends, local high school coaches, current and former Memphis players who come and go until late night, checking out the games on six TVs lining a long wall. "When I see Alabama, I see Logan Young," rants Adams, playing to the crowd. "Dollar signs here, dollar signs there. Rich S.O.B. had more money than brains. Corrupting something I love."
mbadams00.jpg

Once friends with Logan Young, Tennessee booster Roy Adams now takes delight in his 'Bama rival's legal demise.​


Adams is one of Tennessee's troubling boosters. Fulmer described him as "a bad guy!" in a memo to Kramer. Questioned his sexual orientation too in another correspondence. He also claimed Adams had been disassociated from the UT program, though his own compliance director says that is not the case. Adams, in fact, says he's had two season tickets, perched above the 25-yard line, for the last 30 years (some the stubs are framed and hang on his living room wall) and still contributes $500 annually to the university.
Before the NCAA tightened restrictions on booster involvement in the late 1980s, Adams admits to taking care of some UT players. Now, the 70-year-old bon vivant claims to keep his distance, though casting himself as a "friend of athletes" in general.
But how removed is he? Adams produced a recent letter in which a former UT player implied that an Alabama booster tried to buy him coming out of high school, only to conclude his correspondence by soliciting Adams' aid in finding a job.
The reputation of helping kids isn't anything Adams runs from, and loudly declares that it's his constitutional right to lend a hand, especially at schools where he isn't a booster. He tells of buying a car for a Florida kid he steered to LSU more than a decade ago. Former Miami and Seattle Seahawks star defensive tackle Cortez Kennedy, who grew up in nearby Osceola, Ark., is an occasional houseguest and has a key to a second-floor room. At Adams' house later this night, three University of Memphis players -- two redshirts and a starter lost to a knee injury -- fill their plates with ribs and chicken and watch their Tiger teammates play at Tulsa (Adams' nephew, Trey, is a backup place-kicker for Memphis).
"If he is a booster, what he does is illegal," Young says of Adams. "It's not legal to have high school coaches and give them whiskey. Give them anything. I mean Roy, he'd call players on the phone in my presence. He called [former UT tailback] Jay Graham and said, 'I'll pay you $50 if you'll sing Rocky Top.' I didn't think anything about that. I mean, so what? Yet they made a big to-do out of [me] talking about football, and laughing and joking."
300_ticket.gif

Everybody but Logan Young, Lynn Lang and other 'slave traders' are welcomed at Adams' Saturday football parties.​


The two boosters admit to enjoying a night of gambling at the casinos across the Mississippi line. Adams posted the rumor on the Internet, as well as offered it up in a sworn deposition, that Young might have funneled money to players inside one of the casinos. In his videotaped deposition, Adams explained how it works: Sign for a $100,000 marker, play a little blackjack, then cash out and walk away with the rest -- a booster's perfect laundering scheme.
"You can't go to casino and do what Roy said I was doing," said Young, shaking his head. "No. 1, the FBI went to the casino. They told them every time I came and who I came with, and how much I played and when I left and what I left with. He didn't understand that they got videos in casinos. Can't lie about what you're doing."
In some ways, Adams and Young are boosters with more in common than either cares to admit. Until a falling out 10 years ago, the two found time to comfortably kibitz about football over food and drinks.
A defining moment in this scandalous mess came in 1995 when Peyton Manning, then a mere sophomore, led Tennessee to a 41-14 victory that ended a nine-year winless string against Alabama. As Adams recalls, a few weeks later Young invited him to meet at Folk's Folly, a popular steakhouse on Memphis' east side, and proceeded to spout what Adams' took as a declaration of war.
"He'd been drinking, and he said, 'I want to tell you one God damn thing: Soon as Peyton Manning leaves y'all never beat Alabama again,' " recalls Adams, who admits to his own love of liquor. "And they had just gone through this [NCAA] investigation, had to forfeit 10 games the previous season. I had never said a negative word about Alabama or him to his face. It had built up and built up, frustration. I said, 'Let me tell you another God damn thing, we haven't been put on probation and had to forfeit games.' And that was the end of our 10-year friendship, over a damn football game.
"If that didn't happen, I would have still covered for him. Or would never have said anything or told the truth about him. I mean during that 10-year period over drinks and wine, Logan made no secret of how he was able to buy players and stuff like that. I knew. I had to cover up for him. In fact, the NCAA had come to town questioning me about something else. They said, 'You think Logan is buying players?' I said, 'Oh no, that is just Tennessee people and other people talking.' "
Says Young: "I might have said, 'Hey, y'all not gonna be worth a damn when Manning leaves.' So what? You gonna try and put somebody in prison for that?"
"He loved Alabama -- 'not too wisely, but too well'"
What got the feds all hot about something normally handled inside the NCAA? Young suspects Schledwitz, a political mover, of drawing interest to the case. Others speculate liquor store owner Arthur Kahn, himself a former assistant U.S. attorney who is now married to Young's one-time girlfriend, of playing a role. (Kahn admits helping the feds fill in some blanks late in the case, but nothing else.) Or maybe the story was just too hard to ignore.
The fervor picked up after Schledwitz, a booster friend of Fulmer's and now a UT trustee, met with the coach while helping arrange a donation to the athletic department. It was then that Fulmer vented his frustration over Logan Young, and let it be known he could use a friendly hand sorting through the mess in Memphis. "Yeah, I'd say that is accurate," Schledwitz told ESPN.com.
Schledwitz proceeded to phone Adams, among others, and overnight gave organization to what had been only gossip and rumor.
Cole, the UT booster with an ear to recruiting gossip, got a call from Fulmer late one night. Based on what he told Fulmer, the NCAA met with Cole in Room 930 of the Memphis Marriott East.
"Fulmer's deal was he wanted a level playing field," Cole told ESPN.com. "I advised him one time -- ran through Logan and the things he was doing -- and he expressed the same frustrations he'd told Karl."
All the rumors and innuendo still wouldn't have held the NCAA's attention if not for Adams, the chatterbox face of the boosters, getting Milton Kirk to spill his guts after a chance encounter at a Memphis Touchdown Club meeting on Oct. 24, 2000. Rumor had Kirk being stiffed on a SUV that was promised as part of the deal that sent Means to Alabama. And so, standing in the lobby of the Chickasaw Country Club, Adams jokingly asked about his ride.
"He just laughed and smiled, and began to tell me the whole story about what went down," Adams says. "Hell, we had never got any first-hand information, so I immediately called a couple of the Tennessee people over to let them listen to it in case we could do something to follow through."
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Even with James Neal defending him, Young couldn't beat the charges that UT boosters helped investigators build against him.​


The adrenaline rush was such you'd have thought Peyton Manning re-upped for another four-year gig. Adams set up a dinner meeting with guest of honor Kirk the following week at Jim's Place East, one of the top restaurants in Memphis. Schledwitz, who records reveal was interviewed at least twice by NCAA investigators, was then brought in to close the deal, to ensure Kirk's cooperation with the NCAA. His presence insured Kirk's cooperation with the NCAA and Schledwitz ultimately served as Kirk's attorney.
"Chuck Cole and a couple other folks sat there talking to Milton," Adams recalls. "I was still having him repeat this story, cause I didn't want to get involved unless I absolutely felt comfortable he was telling the truth. So I was making sure he told the same story over and over. Well, we're having a few drinks before Karl arrived. The NCAA had got on him, but he had refused to sign anything, refused to be tape recorded. He wanted this to get out, but he didn't want to get that involved. But when Karl Schledwitz walked through that door, Milton's whole persona changed, 'cause Karl Schledwitz is the white Democrat in this black community. He had managed the campaign for Milton's brother [Cleo], who is a prominent black politician on the county commission.
"So over dinner and drinks, Milton told the story again and so Karl believed him and felt comfortable. Milton threw himself at the mercy of Karl, and he did everything that Karl said to do. Karl immediately called the NCAA. And within a couple days they flew into Memphis and, at the Marriott Hotel, Milton agreed to be tape recorded, signed statements and everything.
"The NCAA, who had been after Logan Young for 20 years, finally had something."
And Phillip Fulmer had perhaps his finest coaching victory.
The booster scandal soon left the recruiting scene and Young was indicted by a federal grand jury and convicted of paying $150,000 to lock up Means, the local schoolboy defensive tackle, for his beloved Crimson Tide. Pending a successful appeal, Logan C. Young Jr. is heading to federal prison.
"Mr. Lang committed a crime for greed -- money," Neal, Young's defense attorney, argued at sentencing. "Mr. Young's sin here -- his motive -- it wasn't for greed. To quote Shakespeare, he loved Alabama -- 'not too wisely, but too well.' "
Said U.S. Attorney Fred Godwin in his closing argument: "He spent his money -- not wisely, but well."
Mike Fish is an investigative reporter for ESPN.com. He can be reached at [email protected].
 
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Logan Young found dead in his home.

Memphis police investigate homicide of convicted Alabama booster

<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="428"> <tbody><tr valign="bottom"> <td class="byln" width="328">4/11/2006, 1:44 p.m. ET By TERESA M. WALKER
The Associated Press</td><td width="3"> </td><td width="97">
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NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Logan Young, the booster convicted of bribing a high school coach to get a top recruit for Alabama, was found dead Tuesday in his Memphis home, and police said they are investigating it as a homicide.
Memphis Police Sgt. Vince Higgins said in a telephone interview that the medical examiner was at Young's upscale home near a Memphis country club trying to determine the cause of death.
"We're treating it as a mystery homicide," Higgins said.
He said officials assume the victim was Young but needed to use fingerprints and dental records to confirm the identity.
"Suffice it to say, there was quite a physical struggle in this and this individual was injured severely," the police spokesman said.
Defense attorney Jim Neal of Nashville said the victim was Young.
"I've had two or three calls about it, all to the same end, found killed in his home. ... I heard that there was blood everywhere. That is all I know," Neal said.
Higgins said Young's housekeeper found a man dead in the home after she arrived for work shortly before 9 a.m. CDT.
Young, 65, was convicted under federal law of money laundering and racketeering conspiracy in the case involving the peddling of defensive lineman Albert Means.
Young was free pending his appeal of that conviction. Final briefs in Young's appeal were to be filed by July 14, court records show.
Young was sentenced last June to six months in prison, although his attorneys had argued that he needed a kidney transplant and could not get proper medical care in prison.
Former high school coach Lynn Lang, who avoided jail time after pleading guilty to taking part in a racketeering conspiracy, testified against Young, saying the booster paid $150,000 to get defensive Means to sign with Alabama in 2000.
The NCAA has said it believed Means was unaware his football talents were being brokered. The player later transferred to Memphis, where he finished his college career.
Lang testified at Young's trial that other universities, including Georgia, Kentucky, Arkansas, Memphis, Mississippi, Michigan State and Tennessee, offered him money or jobs to get Means.
No charges were filed against anyone with those schools. Three former coaches, Rip Scherer of Memphis, Jim Donnan of Georgia and Ivy Williams, an Alabama assistant, testified Lang was lying.
Means' recruitment became part of an NCAA investigation that led to sanctions against Alabama in 2002, costing the Crimson Tide scholarships and bowl appearances.
Attorney Tommy Gallion, who represented former Alabama assistants Williams and Ronnie Cottrell in a defamation suit against the NCAA and others, called the news tragic.
"I have no idea who could be behind this. I was shocked that Phillip Shanks was beaten and this was more shocking," Gallion said in a statement read by his secretary.
Shanks was assisting Gallion on the lawsuit in May 2004 when he was attacked in his office and left unconscious. Key case documents were stolen, he said. No one was ever charged in the case.
Defense attorney Robert Hutton said he last talked with Young last week and called his death a total shock and a real loss.
"He was very generous man. He was generous with people around him. A pastor of a Catholic Church, he asked for money for some program, for the roof or something, and he gave him the money. Logan wasn't even Catholic," Hutton said.
"He was a wonderful character. I really enjoyed him as a person. It's just a horrible tragedy."
 
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Police are backing off the homicide theory.

Apr 12, 10:06 PM EDT

Police back off booster's cause of death

By WOODY BAIRD
Associated Press Writer

MEMPHIS Tenn. (AP) -- Police backed off calling the death of an Alabama football booster a homicide Wednesday, a day after investigators said he died in a fierce, bloody struggle.

A police statement referred to a continuing "death investigation" and said a ruling from the medical examiner into the cause and manner of death was pending.

The statement did not explain the change or whether investigators were considering possibilities other than murder. A police spokesman did not return a call Wednesday night.

Logan Young, who was convicted last year of bribing a high school football coach, was found dead at his Memphis home Tuesday. No arrests had been made and no suspects had been identified.

"We're still waiting on the medical examiner's report," police Sgt. Vince Higgins said. "And quite frankly, right now, even if she ruled it a murder, we wouldn't have probable cause enough to charge anyone."

Crime scene crews spent most of two days in Young's house, where police said blood or traces of blood were found in several rooms.

Young, a 65-year-old multimillionaire and longtime booster of Crimson Tide football, was convicted on federal charges last year of paying a high school coach up to $150,000 to send a top recruit to Alabama.

The conviction for money laundering and racketeering conspiracy capped a scandal that put Alabama on NCAA probation and cost Young his favored standing among the university's big-money boosters.

Young had a kidney transplant several months after the trial.

Young, who was divorced, lived alone much of the time. His son, Logan Young III, an only child, apparently had been staying with him off and on recently, police said.

Logan Young III was not at the residence when his father's body was found by a housekeeper. He was located several hours later and taken to police headquarters for questioning. There, he voluntarily gave DNA samples to investigators, including fingernail scrapings, said defense lawyer Steve Farese.

Farese said his client denied any part in the death.

"He was not involved in any way and found out about it watching television," Farese said.

On his federal conviction in June, Young was sentenced to six months in prison plus six months home confinement. He was appealing the conviction and had not yet begun serving the sentence.

Former high school coach Lynn Lang, who avoided jail time by pleading guilty to conspiracy, said Young paid him thousands of dollars in cash to get defensive lineman Albert Means to sign with Alabama in 2000.

Means was not accused of wrongdoing. He stayed at Alabama one season before transferring to Memphis.

Means' recruitment became part of an NCAA investigation that resulted in sanctions against Alabama, and the university announced that Young was no longer welcome as a booster.

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There is meant to be a press conference today ..

But The (Memphis) Commercial Appeal reported on its Web site late Wednesday that police had scheduled a news conference for today to discuss the case. The paper also said detectives had received a preliminary report from the Shelby County medical examiner's office, but that its contents were not disclosed.
LINK
 
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This is pretty strange.

'Bama booster's death an accident

Police say Young fell and hit his head on metal railing

Posted: Thursday April 13, 2006 3:00PM;
Updated: Thursday April 13, 2006 3:19PM

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -- A University of Alabama football booster died when he hit his head in an accidental fall at home, rather than being slain as first thought, the police director said Thursday.

Police initially described the death of 65-year-old Logan Young as a bloody slaying after a fierce struggle but quit calling it a homicide a day later.

"He fell in his house, hit his head on a metal stair railing and died from that injury," Memphis Police Director Larry Godwin said at a news conference.

Young, who was convicted last year of bribing a high school football coach to steer a top recruit to Alabama, was found dead at his Memphis home Tuesday. No arrests had been made and no suspects had been identified although family members and friends had been questioned.

Crime scene crews spent most of two days in Young's house, where police said blood or traces of blood were found in several rooms.

Lt. Joe Scott said Thursday that investigators determined that after Young fell, he lay on the floor awhile before getting up and walking into several rooms and then upstairs to his bedroom.

Young's body was found on the floor beside his bed Tuesday morning by his housekeeper. Scott said police still aren't sure when Young died but he was seen Monday evening by his pool boy.

Young, who was divorced, lived alone much of the time in his stone Tudor home. His son, Logan Young III, an only child, apparently had been staying with him off and on recently, police said.

Logan Young III was not at the residence when his father's body was found by a housekeeper. He was located several hours later and taken to police headquarters for questioning. There, he voluntarily gave DNA samples to investigators, including fingernail scrapings, his lawyer, Steve Farese, said.

The elder Young's conviction for money laundering and racketeering conspiracy capped a scandal that put Alabama on NCAA probation and cost Young his favored standing among the university's big-money boosters.
 
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