The NCAA has formally confirmed that four former Alabama State men’s basketball players were actively involved in manipulating a game for illicit betting purposes in December 2024.

According to a definitive ruling issued by the Division I Committee on Infractions, the student-athletes, Amarr Knox, Shawn Fulcher, Corey Hines, and Tony Madlock, deliberately agreed to throw a competitive contest against Southern Mississippi after being offered direct financial compensation by outside bettors. Following a comprehensive multi-agency review, all four individuals have been declared permanently ineligible from collegiate sports.
The intricate match-fixing case first came to light in July 2025 when Temple University informed NCAA enforcement staff that Corey Hines, who had recently transferred to their program, had been officially contacted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and shown encrypted text messages tied to the underground wagering scheme. Subsequent interviews revealed that Shawn Fulcher had added multiple teammates to an unauthorized group chat with one of the outside bettors, who explicitly offered a cash pool for the team to lose the matchup.
On the morning of the game, the players joined a live FaceTime call with the bettor to finalize the parameters of the fix, during which Tony Madlock stated he was injured and would not play. Amarr Knox reported that the group fully agreed to throw the game and subsequently received $2,000 in total compensation for their participation.
Severe Judicial Charges and Enforcement Panel Oversight
The NCAA’s enforcement staff determined that the four players violated ethical conduct rules at the highest level. Fulcher and Hines were found to have intentionally misled investigators by denying their involvement in calls with bettors and hiding personal betting activity, even though digital forensic records showed otherwise. Fulcher had placed multiple wagers through an unapproved daily fantasy site, while Hines failed to provide requested text records following his interview.
Consequently, both players were formally indicted in January 2026 by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania on severe criminal charges, including bribery in sports wagering contests, wire fraud, and conspiracy to commit wire fraud. Madlock, who had already exhausted his collegiate eligibility, declined to participate in the investigation altogether. Knox, meanwhile, cooperated fully and confirmed that the group had accepted money to influence the outcome of the Southern Mississippi game.
The NCAA noted that while penalties are not directly imposed on student-athletes by the Committee on Infractions, the administrative consequences are clear: once found in violation, athletes are ruled ineligible and can only be reinstated with the support of an NCAA institution. The panel reviewing the case included Norman Bay, Susan Lipnickey, and Steve Waterfield, who emphasized that failing to cooperate with an NCAA investigation, including knowingly giving false information, is itself a serious violation.
The enforcement panel made its position clear in the official case report:
“Failure to cooperate in an NCAA investigation, including knowingly providing false information during an interview, violates NCAA rules.”

