WarriorGM wrote:How is it fraud for a more knowledgeable person to take advantage of that knowledge?
You can't be serious.
An individual is using confidential, highly specific information that is not readily available to the general public to their advantage. That is identical to insider trading. It undermines the integrity and fairness of
both industries.
Legal sportsbooks brought in something like $150 billion last year -- three times more than the NFL, NBA, MLB and NHL combined -- so it is an absolutely massive business, with some estimates that anywhere from 20-30% of American adults participated in. Allowing a privileged few to exploit their positions effectively games the system in both cases at the expense of the overwhelming majority.
"Hey, that merger isn't going to be approved so sell your shares."
"Hey, LeBron isn't playing tonight so bet huge, and cut me in too."
And the government, such as it is, tends to take things like that seriously. While there was certainly some gamesmanship involved -- I think the lead supervisor was gunning for higher office -- they sent Martha Stewart to federal prison for less than $50K in stock trades.
Perhaps more importantly, letting that slide opens the door to further manipulation.
Like imagine if Billups, or Damon Jones, or the video intern, or whoever, passes that information on and gets a cut. Easiest money they've ever made. Then they go to one of the players they're tight with and lay that out, upon which they scheme to do it again, similar to how Rozier did by faking an injury. Now you're in the realm of outright match fixing, which (again) it shouldn't take a genius to figure out why that's bad.
(I've seen people blow that off because, lol, it's Terry Rozier; he was Charlotte's second-leading scorer that season and 30th in the NBA overall. That was a huge, huge deal. He essentially shaved points, which has and always will be illegal for very obvious reasons.)
It doesn't seem likely given the money some of these guys make. But I never would have imagined two people with $100 million in career earnings would have done what Billups and Rozier did, and here we are.
The easiest route is to just take that all off the table and avoid any impropriety at all.