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 Thursday, January 13
Grant, Nike executive testify before grand jury
 
Associated Press

 KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Federal prosecutors questioned an Oklahoma State athlete while a Nike Inc. executive and a Kansas City businessman testified before a federal grand jury that has been investigating reports of improper payments to high school basketball players during summer league competition.

Oklahoma State freshman Andre Williams is one of the three former high school stars from the Kansas City area who have been suspended from play with their college teams. He was interviewed Wednesday.

The grand jury is exploring whether improper payments endangered players' college eligibility and economically harmed federally funded universities.

Don Crenshaw, Nike's manager of high school basketball, spent about an hour before the grand jury. Through his lawyer, J.R. Hobbs, Crenshaw declined comment about his testimony.

"Nike is fully cooperating with the investigation," Hobbs said. "Nike is not a target of the investigation."

Crenshaw directs Nike's high school basketball programs nationwide, organizing tournaments, camps and corporate funding for traveling summer teams.

Williams and two other former Kansas City prep stars suspended from their college teams, brothers JaRon and Kareem Rush, all played on a Nike-sponsored summer team while in high school.

Each has reportedly acknowledged receiving improper payments or benefits before they went to college.

The coach of the summer team, Myron Piggie Sr., also was a paid Nike consultant. Piggie says he has done nothing improper.

After Crenshaw's testimony the grand jury heard for about 10 minutes from Tom Grant, a Kansas City businessman who paid the prep school tuition for Williams, who spent his senior year at a school in Maine, and JaRon Rush, who played at Kansas City's Pembroke Hill High School.

Grant, the chief executive officer of LabOne Inc., declined to comment about his testimony. John Osgood, his lawyer, said Grant has cooperated with the probe by giving investigators information about the support his charitable foundation provided to the players.

"He was just filling in some details about this whole unfortunate episode," Osgood said.

Grant also provided financial support to the summer teams on which the three Kansas City players competed.

Williams emerged from his 90-minute meeting with prosecutors saying he was weary with the case.

"It's frustrating, to say the least," Williams said. "I'm going back to school. I'm ready to get back on the court and play."

Williams, who played at Schlagle High School in Kansas City, Kan., before transferring to the Maine school, has been indefinitely suspended by Oklahoma State for accepting impermissible benefits.

Grant, who provided the tuition for Williams to attend the school, said last week the NCAA has made a preliminary decision to suspend Williams for a year because of the tuition payments.

The NCAA, according to Grant, said Williams must repay the $20,000 in tuition before his eligibility is complete.

Williams' attorney, Mark Zannotti of Tulsa, instructed him not to answer a reporter's questions about the investigation.

Zannotti, however, said that Williams' case, aside from the grand jury probe, could set an NCAA precedent, but wouldn't detail why.

"Since this case is going to be a precedent, (NCAA officials) are going through all the channels to set a decision that sets a correct precedent," Zannotti said. "We appreciate the NCAA's willingness to keep a dialogue."

Kareem Rush, who is serving a nine-game suspension from the University of Missouri team, spent about three hours in the U.S. attorney's office earlier this week. The NCAA, which imposed the suspension, has stated that he must pay $1,800 to a charity before his college eligibility expires.

That supposedly is the amount he received in excess of permissible benefits while playing summer basketball while he was in high school.

Meanwhile, the lawyer for Los Angeles sports agent Jerome Stanley confirmed Wednesday that a subpoena had been issued for his client to appear before the grand jury.

Earlier this week, JaRon Rush, a sophomore at UCLA, acknowledged to reporters that he had accepted money from a sports agent, confirming earlier accounts from his grandmother that he got $200 from Stanley.

David Bass, a lawyer representing Stanley, reiterated Wednesday that Stanley still contends he never gave money to JaRon Rush.

"There is nothing more to add," Bass said. "JaRon's public statements do not change the facts. What we said is the truth, and we have no idea why he (JaRon) would say that."
 



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