The post Circumstantial Evidence Might Not Doom Clippers In Kawhi Leonard Scandal appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. INGLEWOOD, CA – JANUARY 16: Clippers owner Steve Ballmer, left, and NBA Commissioner Adam Silver have announced that the 2026 NBA All-Star Game will be held at the team’s new Inglewood arena, the Intuit Dome. Press conference held at Intuit Dome on Tuesday, Jan. 16, 2024 in Inglewood, CA. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images) Los Angeles Times via Getty Images Evidence continues to mount regarding alleged salary-cap circumvention involving Los Angeles Clippers star Kawhi Leonard. Pablo Torre first broke the story on his Pablo Torre Finds Out podcast, revealing that Leonard had a four-year, $28 million endorsement deal with a now-bankrupt environmental company that didn’t actually require him to do anything. One former employee told Torre that it was designed “to circumvent the salary cap,” a charge which the Clippers have firmly denied. However, months before Leonard signed his deal with Aspiration, Clippers governor Steve Ballmer made a $50 million investment into Aspiration. Andrei Cherny, Aspiration’s co-founder and former CEO, denied that Leonard’s endorsement deal was a “no-show contract.” He also said that “in the months of discussion among our executives before signing the sponsorship,” he didn’t “remember conversations about the NBA salary cap.” However, the allegations are explosive enough that the NBA has hired the law firm Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz to fully investigate. If the NBA determines that the Clippers did intentionally circumvent the salary cap by investing in Aspiration and redirecting most of that money to Leonard, they could face steep penalties including the loss of draft picks, suspension of team executives and even the voiding of Leonard’s contract. NBA Commissioner Adam Silver made clear last week that he isn’t ready to jump to conclusions yet, though. “The burden is on the league if we’re going to discipline a team, an owner,… The post Circumstantial Evidence Might Not Doom Clippers In Kawhi Leonard Scandal appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. INGLEWOOD, CA – JANUARY 16: Clippers owner Steve Ballmer, left, and NBA Commissioner Adam Silver have announced that the 2026 NBA All-Star Game will be held at the team’s new Inglewood arena, the Intuit Dome. Press conference held at Intuit Dome on Tuesday, Jan. 16, 2024 in Inglewood, CA. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images) Los Angeles Times via Getty Images Evidence continues to mount regarding alleged salary-cap circumvention involving Los Angeles Clippers star Kawhi Leonard. Pablo Torre first broke the story on his Pablo Torre Finds Out podcast, revealing that Leonard had a four-year, $28 million endorsement deal with a now-bankrupt environmental company that didn’t actually require him to do anything. One former employee told Torre that it was designed “to circumvent the salary cap,” a charge which the Clippers have firmly denied. However, months before Leonard signed his deal with Aspiration, Clippers governor Steve Ballmer made a $50 million investment into Aspiration. Andrei Cherny, Aspiration’s co-founder and former CEO, denied that Leonard’s endorsement deal was a “no-show contract.” He also said that “in the months of discussion among our executives before signing the sponsorship,” he didn’t “remember conversations about the NBA salary cap.” However, the allegations are explosive enough that the NBA has hired the law firm Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz to fully investigate. If the NBA determines that the Clippers did intentionally circumvent the salary cap by investing in Aspiration and redirecting most of that money to Leonard, they could face steep penalties including the loss of draft picks, suspension of team executives and even the voiding of Leonard’s contract. NBA Commissioner Adam Silver made clear last week that he isn’t ready to jump to conclusions yet, though. “The burden is on the league if we’re going to discipline a team, an owner,…

Circumstantial Evidence Might Not Doom Clippers In Kawhi Leonard Scandal

For tilbakemeldinger eller bekymringer angående dette innholdet, kontakt oss på crypto.news@mexc.com

INGLEWOOD, CA – JANUARY 16: Clippers owner Steve Ballmer, left, and NBA Commissioner Adam Silver have announced that the 2026 NBA All-Star Game will be held at the team’s new Inglewood arena, the Intuit Dome. Press conference held at Intuit Dome on Tuesday, Jan. 16, 2024 in Inglewood, CA. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Evidence continues to mount regarding alleged salary-cap circumvention involving Los Angeles Clippers star Kawhi Leonard.

Pablo Torre first broke the story on his Pablo Torre Finds Out podcast, revealing that Leonard had a four-year, $28 million endorsement deal with a now-bankrupt environmental company that didn’t actually require him to do anything. One former employee told Torre that it was designed “to circumvent the salary cap,” a charge which the Clippers have firmly denied. However, months before Leonard signed his deal with Aspiration, Clippers governor Steve Ballmer made a $50 million investment into Aspiration.

Andrei Cherny, Aspiration’s co-founder and former CEO, denied that Leonard’s endorsement deal was a “no-show contract.” He also said that “in the months of discussion among our executives before signing the sponsorship,” he didn’t “remember conversations about the NBA salary cap.” However, the allegations are explosive enough that the NBA has hired the law firm Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz to fully investigate.

If the NBA determines that the Clippers did intentionally circumvent the salary cap by investing in Aspiration and redirecting most of that money to Leonard, they could face steep penalties including the loss of draft picks, suspension of team executives and even the voiding of Leonard’s contract. NBA Commissioner Adam Silver made clear last week that he isn’t ready to jump to conclusions yet, though.

“The burden is on the league if we’re going to discipline a team, an owner, a player or any constituent members of the league,” Silver told reporters after an NBA board of governors meeting last week. “I think as with any process that requires a fundamental sense of fairness, the burden should be on the party that is, in essence, bringing those charges.”

The exact wording of the NBA’s collective bargaining agreement might help spare the Clippers in this investigation, particularly if more circumstantial evidence emerges.

Evidence Continues To Mount About Potential Circumvention

Since Torre’s initial report, more details have emerged about Leonard’s relationship with Aspiration along with the involvement of Ballmer and others affiliated with the Clippers organization. John Karalis of Boston Sports Journal reported that Leonard also “cut a side deal” for an additional $20 million in company stock, which Torre later confirmed. Bruce Arthur of the Toronto Star reported that when Leonard was a free agent in 2019, his “uncle and representative, Dennis Robertson, made demands that line up almost perfectly with what Leonard reportedly got from Aspiration.”

That’s not all. Torre later reported that Dennis Wong, a Clippers minority owner who was Ballmer’s college roommate, invested $1.99 million in Aspiration in December 2022. Nine days later, Aspiration made its quarterly $1.75 million payment to Leonard while laying off 20 percent of its employees, according to a former company employee. And on Friday, Mike Vorkunov of The Athletic reported Ballmer invested an additional $10 million into Aspiration in March 2023 as the company “was hemorrhaging cash, laying off employees and struggling to raise funds.”

Ballmer told ESPN’s Ramona Shelburne that Aspiration “conned” him with “primarily fraudulent financials.” That could explain why he made that type of an investment, particularly as Aspiration was already starting to go under. However, the timing of Wong and Ballmer’s investments—and the urgency that Aspiration reportedly felt to continue paying Leonard even as the rest of the business crumbled—raises eyebrows.

The section of the NBA’s collective bargaining agreement dealing with salary-cap circumvention does allow the commissioner to punish teams based on “direct or circumstantial evidence” in certain circumstances. The question is whether the allegations raised by Torre and others fit cleanly into that category.

Was Aspiration A ‘Team Affiliate’ Of The Clippers?

The CBA defines two types of circumvention: those between a player and a team or “team affiliate,” and those between a team and a sponsor, business partner or a third party. It defines a “team affiliate” as any individual or entity which “holds an ownership interest in a team” or any entity that a team owner holds “more than 5% of its ownership interests.”

That might be the clause that spares the Clippers from a death penalty-level punishment.

During his interview with Shelburne, Ballmer specifically noted he had “no control” over Aspiration and owned less than 3% of it. That might have been his subtle attempt to sway the NBA from considering Aspiration a “team affiliate,” which would spare the Clippers from the most severe punishments allowable by the CBA.

If Aspiration did count as a team affiliate—or if the NBA determines that Ballmer and his co-owners invested in Aspiration to reroute money to Leonard—it could strip the Clippers of multiple draft picks, fine Ballmer up to $7.5 million, potentially void Leonard’s contract and hand one-year suspensions to any executives who participated in the scheme. Otherwise, the league could only fine the Clippers up to $5.5 million—since this would be their second offense—strip one first-round pick and potentially void Leonard’s contract.

After the recent board of governors meeting, Silver made it clear that circumstantial evidence might not be enough on its own to merit a punishment.

“In the case of the league, we and our investigators look at the totality of the evidence,” Silver said. “I think whether mere appearance, just by the way those words read, as a matter of fundamental fairness, I would be reluctant to act if there was a mere appearance of impropriety. I think the goal of a full investigation is to find out if there really was impropriety.

“In a public-facing sport, the public at times reaches conclusions that later turn out to be completely false. I would want anybody else in the situation Mr. Ballmer is in now—or Kawhi Leonard, for that matter—to be treated the same way I would want to be treated if people were making allegations against me. We’re not a court of law at the end of the day, either. We have broad authority to look at all information and to weigh it accordingly.”

The steady trickle of reports is forming a mountain of damning evidence. However, it’s still unclear whether that’s enough for the Clippers to face the most severe punishments that Silver can hand out for salary-cap circumvention.

If the NBA finds a written agreement between the Clippers and Aspiration like the secret contract that Joe Smith signed with the Minnesota Timberwolves in the late 1990s, Silver will likely lay down the full hammer. But if the NBA can’t definitively prove that Ballmer and his Clippers co-owners invested in Aspiration with the express purpose of funneling additional money to Leonard, they might be spared from Silver’s full wrath.

Unless otherwise noted, all stats via NBA.com, PBPStats, Cleaning the Glass or Basketball Reference. All salary information via Spotrac and salary-cap information via RealGM. All odds via FanDuel Sportsbook.

Follow Bryan on Bluesky.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/bryantoporek/2025/09/15/circumstantial-evidence-might-not-doom-clippers-in-kawhi-leonard-scandal/

Markedsmulighet
Threshold Logo
Threshold Pris(T)
$0.006549
$0.006549$0.006549
+0.01%
USD
Threshold (T) Live prisdiagram
Ansvarsfraskrivelse: Artiklene som legges ut på dette nettstedet er hentet fra offentlige plattformer og er kun ment som informasjon. De gjenspeiler ikke nødvendigvis synspunktene til MEXC. Alle rettigheter forblir hos de opprinnelige forfatterne. Hvis du mener at innhold krenker tredjeparts rettigheter, kan du kontakte crypto.news@mexc.com for fjerning. MEXC gir ingen garantier for innholdets nøyaktighet, fullstendighet eller aktualitet, og er ikke ansvarlig for handlinger som iverksettes basert på informasjonen som gis. Innholdet utgjør ikke økonomisk, juridisk eller annen profesjonell rådgivning, og bør heller ikke betraktes som en anbefaling eller godkjenning fra MEXC.

Du liker kanskje også

USD: The Unstoppable Safe-Haven Surge Fueled by Middle East Tensions and Robust Economic Data – Societe Generale Analysis

USD: The Unstoppable Safe-Haven Surge Fueled by Middle East Tensions and Robust Economic Data – Societe Generale Analysis

BitcoinWorld USD: The Unstoppable Safe-Haven Surge Fueled by Middle East Tensions and Robust Economic Data – Societe Generale Analysis NEW YORK, March 2025 – The
Del
bitcoinworld2026/03/05 20:15
‘We Want to Be Dominant in Crypto,’ Trump Says as Market Rallies

‘We Want to Be Dominant in Crypto,’ Trump Says as Market Rallies

The post ‘We Want to Be Dominant in Crypto,’ Trump Says as Market Rallies appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Donald Trump says the United States must become dominant
Del
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/03/05 19:47
‘We Didn’t Get It Done In Time’

‘We Didn’t Get It Done In Time’

The post ‘We Didn’t Get It Done In Time’ appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Topline A new episode of “South Park” will not air Wednesday night as originally planned, series creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone announced Wednesday afternoon, delaying the show’s first episode since it faced scrutiny for satirizing conservative activist Charlie Kirk weeks before his assassination. “South Park” creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker said Wednesday afternoon they did not finish a new episode of the series in time. (Photo by Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images for Paramount+) Getty Images for Paramount+ Key Facts “Apparently when you do everything at the last minute sometimes you don’t get it done,” Parker and Stone said in a statement, adding: “This one’s on us. We didn’t get it done in time.” Comedy Central confirmed to Forbes the delayed episode, the fifth episode of season 27, would instead air next Wednesday, Sept. 24, at 10 p.m. EDT. Some “South Park” fans noticed by Wednesday, no teaser trailer or synopsis for the upcoming episode had been released, a break from previous weeks in which the “South Park” social media accounts would tease new episodes days in advance. After the new episode on Sept. 24, the show will take a three-week break, according to Comedy Central, with new episodes airing every two weeks beginning Oct. 15. According to Comedy Central’s schedule for Wednesday night, the new episode was slated to air after reruns of all the season 27 episodes released so far—except for the second episode, “Got a Nut,” which Comedy Central pulled from the air after Kirk was assassinated. Why Did Comedy Central Pull An Episode Of “south Park?” “Got a Nut” was pulled from Comedy Central’s rerun rotation last week following Kirk’s assassination, though the episode remains available to stream on Paramount+. In the episode, main character Eric Cartman tries to win a debating award, the “Charlie Kirk…
Del
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 04:35