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Former employee accused of stealing more than $22 million from the Jacksonville Jaguars....

The Tradition

HR King
Apr 23, 2002
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A former Jaguars employee has been accused of stealing $22 million from the team.

And, no, it’s not Blake Bortles.

According to TheAthletic.com, former front-office employee Amit Patel allegedly embezzled from the Jaguars by “exploiting the organization’s virtual credit card program.” Patel allegedly used the money to buy two vehicles, a condominium, and a designer watch, among other things. He also allegedly purchased cryptocurrency, placed bets with online gambling sites, and chartered personal jets.

The team was not named in the federal filing, but the Jaguars have confirmed that Patel is accused of stealing from the franchise.

“We can confirm that in February 2023, the team terminated the employment of the individual named in the filing,” the team said in a statement, per TheAthletic.com. “Over the past several months we have cooperated fully with the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida during their investigation and thank them for their efforts in this case. As was made clear in the charges, this individual was a former manager of financial planning and analysis who took advantage of his trusted position to covertly and intentionally commit significant fraudulent financial activity at the team’s expense for personal benefit. This individual had no access to confidential football strategy, personnel or other football information. The team engaged experienced law and accounting firms to conduct a comprehensive independent review, which concluded that no other team employees were involved in or aware of his criminal activity.”

Patel was charged with one count of wire fraud and one count of illegal monetary transactions. He is accused of stealing at least $22,221,454.40 from the Jaguars.


You'd think someone would have noticed loooooong before he racked up $22 million.....
 
According to TheAthletic.com, former front-office employee Amit Patel allegedly embezzled from the Jaguars by “exploiting the organization’s virtual credit card program.” Patel allegedly used the money to buy two vehicles, a condominium, and a designer watch, among other things. He also allegedly purchased cryptocurrency, placed bets with online gambling sites, and chartered personal jets.
That's A LOT of "other things" to come to $22M.

Seriously....the accounting dept for the Jaguars needs to be shit canned immediately :)
 
Head of Jaguars accounting department going over monthly expenditures...

employee-playing-computer-games-in-the-office-PHJYGD.jpg
 
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The attorney for a former Jacksonville Jaguars employee facing federal fraud charges said his client suffers from a gambling addiction that contributed to his alleged theft of more than $22 million from the franchise.

Federal investigators allege Amit Patel manipulated the Jaguars' virtual credit card (VCC) program to steal $22,221,454.40 during a scheme that began in September 2019 and ended in February after an NFL investigation and his subsequent termination.

In a statement released Thursday, Patel's attorney, Alex King, said his client "used VCC funds to gamble on Daily Fantasy Sports" on FanDuel and DraftKings and that "approximately 99% of the misappropriated funds" were related to gambling losses.

"The losses were most significant in the final months leading up to the NFL's investigation," King said in the statement, adding that Patel has been receiving treatment for his addiction since the spring.

FanDuel declined comment on the case. ESPN has reached out to DraftKings for comment.

 
The attorney for a former Jacksonville Jaguars employee facing federal fraud charges said his client suffers from a gambling addiction that contributed to his alleged theft of more than $22 million from the franchise.

Federal investigators allege Amit Patel manipulated the Jaguars' virtual credit card (VCC) program to steal $22,221,454.40 during a scheme that began in September 2019 and ended in February after an NFL investigation and his subsequent termination.

In a statement released Thursday, Patel's attorney, Alex King, said his client "used VCC funds to gamble on Daily Fantasy Sports" on FanDuel and DraftKings and that "approximately 99% of the misappropriated funds" were related to gambling losses.

"The losses were most significant in the final months leading up to the NFL's investigation," King said in the statement, adding that Patel has been receiving treatment for his addiction since the spring.

FanDuel declined comment on the case. ESPN has reached out to DraftKings for comment.

Jfc lawyers suck... already setting up the, "it's a disease, it's not his fault" defense.
 
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