logo
Sports CEO Timothy Leiweke charged in Texas arena bid-rigging scheme

Sports CEO Timothy Leiweke charged in Texas arena bid-rigging scheme

The Guardian12-07-2025
A prominent sports executive has been criminally charged with organising a conspiracy to ensure his own company won the bid to build a $388m sports arena in Texas.
Timothy Leiweke, the former president of the Denver Nuggets basketball team and former CEO of MLSE, which owns Toronto's major sports franchises including the Leafs and Raptors was charged on Wednesday by a federal grand jury. He resigned as chief executive of the company at the center of the case, Oak View Group (OVG), after the announcement.
Spokespeople for Leiweke, 68, issued a statement maintaining he had 'done nothing wrong and will vigorously defend himself and his well-deserved reputation for fairness and integrity'.
Investigators allege that Leiweke spent a period from February 2018 to at least June 2024 conspiring with a competitor's CEO to 'rig the bidding for the development, management and use' of the Moody Center, at the University of Texas at Austin.
Leiweke allegedly struck a deal that the rival firm would agreed to avoid bidding on the Moody Center in exchange for OVG providing it with the project's subcontracts.
OVG went on to construct the building after submitting the sole bid and the Moody Center opened in 2022. The company 'continues to receive significant revenues from the project to date', the US justice department said in a statement.
Leiweke could face up to 10 years in prison and a fine of $1m or more if convicted.
A statement from Abigail Slater, an assistant attorney general at the justice department's antitrust division, accused Leiweke of having 'deprived a public university and taxpayers of the benefits of competitive bidding' to boost his company's bottom line. She said federal officials would always strive 'to hold executives who cheat to avoid competition accountable'.
Christopher Raia of the FBI said in a statement that 'public contracts are subject to laws requiring an open and competitive bid process to ensure a level playing field', adding: 'The FBI is determined to ensure those who disregard fair competition principles do not benefit from a rigged bidding process targeting our communities and public institutions.'
Leiweke was president of the Nuggets from 1991 to 1995 before becoming CEO of the Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG), whose holdings include the Los Angeles Kings hockey team and Los Angeles Galaxy soccer club. After leaving AEG in 2013, he was CEO and president of Canada-based MLSE, whose holdings include Toronto's major sports franchises. He co-founded OVG, based in Denver, and became its CEO in 2015.
Among OVG's upcoming construction projects was a new arena at Louisiana State University (LSU). Officials at the university reportedly told The Advocate newspaper that they are reviewing how the charges against Leiweke may affect the new arena project.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bryan Kohberger files reveal terrifying new evidence including signs of a practice run a MONTH before murders
Bryan Kohberger files reveal terrifying new evidence including signs of a practice run a MONTH before murders

Daily Mail​

time19 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Bryan Kohberger files reveal terrifying new evidence including signs of a practice run a MONTH before murders

Bryan Kohberger 's victims saw a man lurking in the trees outside their home and found their front door mysteriously open one month before the killer struck, according to newly-released police records. Moscow Police Department released a trove of 314 previously-sealed records related to the investigation into the November 13, 2022, murders of Madison Mogen, Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin on Wednesday afternoon - just hours after the mass killer was sentenced to a lifetime behind bars. Within the huge document dump, new details emerged about the police investigation which ultimately led to the capture and conviction of 30-year-old criminology student. In a bombshell revelation, the records show that the roommates at 1122 King Road in Moscow, Idaho, had experienced disturbing incidents at the home just one month before the murders. Goncalves had told at least two friends that she had seen a man watching her in the trees around the home. Surviving roommate Dylan Mortensen - who bravely spoke out in Wednesday's sentencing hearing - told police Goncalves described seeing the 'shadow' when she took her pet dog Murphy outside. Another friend echoed this accounts, telling police Goncalves had seen a dark figure staring at her from the tree line when taking Murphy outside. Mortensen, who was 19 at the time, also recalled one time when she came home to find the door to their three-story house open. The survivor told police Goncalves had also mentioned someone following her around two or three weeks before her murder. The other friend, whose name is redacted in the documents, told police they would make 'lighthearted talk and jokes' about a possible stalker - but that the girls 'were slightly nervous about it being a fact.' The friend also said she knew the front door of the home had issues with locking and sometimes could be unlocked without a code. Around that same time, a female student living on Queen Road - close to the King Road home - said a man tried to break into her home. At around 1am on October 14, 2022, the woman heard what she thought was a man walk up to her door and try to open it, the police records reveal. But the door was locked with the deadbolt on. It is not clear if the incidents are related and if it is possible Kohberger was carrying out a practice run for the murders one month later. It is also unclear if the man Goncalves saw was Kohberger surveilling the victims' home, or if he may have broken into the home prior to the night of his attack. But the details of these bizarre incidents come as prosecutors have been able to confirm Kohberger was surveilling the home for some time. From July 2022 through to November 13, 2022, Kohberger's phone placed him in the vicinity of the King Road home at least 23 times, mostly at night. Who Kohberger was watching and why he chose the home - and the students inside - only he knows. Despite his guilty plea and sentencing, the killer's motive and target for the murders remain a mystery. Speaking at a press conference after the sentencing, Moscow Police Corporal Brett Payne told reporters that while they know Kohberger 'targeted' that house, they still don't know why. 'The evidence suggested that there was a reason that this particular house was chosen. What that reason is, we don't know,' he said. Investigators also remain in the dark about whether one or more of the victims inside the home was his intended target. Around one month after these incidents, Kohberger broke into the student home and stabbed the four victims to death. At around 4am, he entered through the back sliding door on the second story of the property and went straight up the stairs to Mogen's bedroom on the third floor. He found her and Goncalves sleeping in her bed and fatally stabbed the 21-year-old best friends. On his way back downstairs or on leaving the property, he encountered Kernodle on the second floor, who was still awake on TikTok, having just received a DoorDash food order. Kohberger attacked the 20-year-old with his knife and then also murdered her boyfriend Chapin who was asleep in her bed. Kohberger then left through the same back sliding door of the property, passing Mortensen who had been woken by the noise and peeked around her bedroom door. Mortensen - the sole person who came face-to-face with the killer that night and made it out alive - described seeing a masked man, dressed in all black and with bushy eyebrows. Terrified, she and roommate Bethany Funke - whose bedroom was on the first floor - frantically called and text each other and their four friends. But the victims were already dead. Mortensen ultimately ran down to Funke's room where the two survivors stayed until daylight. Just before midday - still unable to contact the four victims - they called friends round to the home and the bloodbath was discovered. The newly-unsealed documents reveal harrowing new details about the injuries Kohberger inflicted on his victims. One officer on the scene described seeing Kernodle's body on her bedroom covered in blood, with defensive wounds to her hands, including a deep gash between her finger and thumb. 'It was obvious an intense struggle had occurred,' the officer wrote. 'There was blood smeared on various items in the room and all over the floor.' She had suffered more than 50 stab wounds. Chapin was partially covered with a blanket in her bed, with his jugular severed, the police files said. On the floor above, officers found the bodies of Mogen and Goncalves. As well as more than 20 stab wounds, Goncalves' face was so badly damaged she was 'unrecognizable.' Mogen had wounds to her forearm, hands and a gash from her right eye to her nose. Both were covered in blood, which had covered the pink blanket they were sharing. Kohberger left behind a Ka-Bar leather knife sheath next to Mogen's body. DNA on the clasp was traced back to the killer using Investigative Genetic Genealogy. Surveillance footage on multiple homes and businesses close to King Road had also captured his white Hyundai Elantra driving to and from the crime scene at the time of the murders. Kohberger was arrested on December 30, 2022, at his parents' home in Albrightsville, Pennsylvania. After more than two years of fighting the charges, Kohberger finally confessed to the murders in a change of plea hearing earlier this month. He was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole in an emotional hearing on Wednesday, where the families and friends of the victims were finally able to confront the man who slaughtered their loved ones while they slept. Dressed in orange prison garb with his wrists and ankles shackled, the 30-year-old stared blankly at the families showing not even a flicker of emotion or remorse. When it was his chance to speak, he maintained his silence. 'I respectfully decline,' he said boldly when asked by Judge Hippler if he would like to take the opportunity to address the court. Those were the only three words he spoke, keeping the victims' families in the dark about the murders. Kohberger has now been transferred to the custody of the Idaho Department of Correction, which will determine which prison will become home for the rest of his life. Due to the severity of his crime - and the high-profile nature of the case - Kohberger is expected to be sent to the state's only maximum security facility, Idaho Maximum Security Institution.

Trump administration canceled a $4.9B loan guarantee for a line to deliver green power
Trump administration canceled a $4.9B loan guarantee for a line to deliver green power

The Independent

time21 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Trump administration canceled a $4.9B loan guarantee for a line to deliver green power

The Trump administration on Wednesday canceled a $4.9 billion federal loan guarantee for a new high-voltage transmission line for delivering solar and wind-generated electricity from the Midwest to the eastern U.S., but the company indicated that project would go forward anyway. The U.S. Department of Energy declared that it is "not critical for the federal government to have a role' in the first phase of Chicago-based Invenergy's planned Grain Belt Express. The department also questioned whether the $11 billion project could meet the financial conditions required for a loan guarantee. President Donald Trump has repeatedly derided wind and solar energy as unreliable and opposed efforts to combat climate change by moving away from fossil fuels. The Department of Energy also said Wednesday that the conditional commitment to Invenergy in November was among billions of dollars' worth of commitments "rushed out the doors" by former President Joe Biden 's administration after Biden lost the election. Two prominent Missouri Republicans, U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley and state Attorney General Andrew Bailey, have been vocal critics of the project, describing it as a threat to farmland and landowners' property rights. Hawley said on July 10 that he had secured a pledge from U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright to cancel the loan guarantee in a conversation with him and Trump. 'To ensure more responsible stewardship of taxpayer resources, DOE has terminated its conditional commitment,' the agency said in a statement. A federal loan guarantee generally makes borrowing money less costly. A statement issued for the Grain Belt Express expressed disappointment, calling the new transmission line 'America's largest power pipeline.' Construction has been set to start next year. The statement added: 'A privately financed Grain Belt Express transmission superhighway will advance President Trump's agenda of American energy and technology dominance while delivering billions of dollars in energy cost savings, strengthening grid reliability and resiliency, and creating thousands of American jobs.' Invenergy has said its project would create 4,000 jobs and new efficiencies in delivering power, and that it would save consumers $52 billion over 15 years. The line would deliver electricity from western Kansas about 800 miles (1,287 kilometers), across Missouri and Illinois and into Indiana, connecting there to the power grid for the eastern U.S. It could deliver up to 5,000 megawatts of electricity. "When electricity demand and consumer power bills are soaring, it's hard to imagine a more backward move,' said Bob Keefe, executive director of E2, a nonpartisan, Washington-based group supporting renewable energy. The decision to cancel the loan guarantee came the same day Trump unveiled a plan for U.S. dominance in artificial intelligence that includes speeding up the permitting of new data centers and factories that will boost the demand for electricity. 'This gross mismanagement of our country's energy needs will increase power bills for hundreds of millions of people while making the electricity grid less reliable,' said Laurie Williams, director of a campaign against fossil fuels for the Sierra Club environmental group. Jigar Shah, who headed the Department of Energy office handling loan guarantees under Biden, said that if an applicant meets the requirements of a conditional commitment, the department is obligated to follow through. 'This decision is illegal,' he said in a post on the LinkedIn social media platform. Hawley and Bailey have called the Grain Belt Express a 'scam." Critics object to what Hawley labels an "elitist land grab,' the company's ability to use lawsuits against individual landowners along the line's route to compel them to sell their property. Online court records show that the company filed dozens of such lawsuits in Missouri circuit courts in recent years. The Missouri Farm Bureau's president posted on the social platform X Wednesday that the project threatened to 'sacrifice rural America in the name of progress.' 'We've won a major battle in the war for Missouri's private property rights and farmers," Bailey said. 'At our urging, the DOE saw this boondoggle for what it was.' Bailey acknowledged in his comments that the project still could go forward with private funding and no loan guarantee but added, 'If Invenergy still intends to force this project on unwilling landowners, we will continue to fight every step of the way.'

Packaging Corp forecasts profit below estimates on export, freight pressures
Packaging Corp forecasts profit below estimates on export, freight pressures

Reuters

time21 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Packaging Corp forecasts profit below estimates on export, freight pressures

July 23 (Reuters) - Packaging Corp of America (PKG.N), opens new tab forecast third-quarter profit below Wall Street estimates on Wednesday, hurt by rising freight costs and weak export containerboard sales amid global trade uncertainty. The Lake Forest, Illinois-based company specializes in delivering paper and packaging products catering to a range of sectors, including the food and beverage industry, paper manufacturing, and retail commerce. While demand for packaging goods is recovering from a post-pandemic slowdown, sticky inflation and cautious consumer sentiment have pressured sales, especially while its customers navigate trade uncertainties due to tariffs. CEO Mark Kowlzan said pricing in both packaging and paper will remain flat in the third quarter, while freight costs will rise due to higher rail rates. The company expects third-quarter profit of $2.80 per share, compared with analysts' average estimate of $2.92 per share, according to LSEG data. Packaging Corp's net sales rose slightly to $2.17 billion in the quarter ended June 30, from $2.07 billion a year earlier. Analysts on average estimated $2.19 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG. Its adjusted profit for the second quarter came in at $2.48 per share, compared with estimates of $2.44.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store