Lawyers: Gambling a 'drug' for ex-NBA ref Donaghy
By Kevin Johnson, USA TODAY
Former NBA referee Tim Donaghy, who pleaded guilty last year to a betting scandal, suffers from "a pathological gambling" disorder that destroyed his career and left his personal life in shambles, his lawyers said Monday in federal court documents.
Although he faces up to 25 years in prison, defense lawyers in a 27-page letter to U.S. District Judge Carol Bagley Amon asked that Donaghy, 42, be sentenced to probation in deference to his diagnosis and extensive cooperation with federal investigators.
Sentencing is scheduled for July 14 in Brooklyn.
"Tim Donaghy's tragic fall from grace cannot be explained without understanding the psychological demon that he lived with for many years," attorney John Lauro wrote. "Tim had a wonderful life — a successful career as a NBA referee, a happy and stable marriage and the love of four young daughters. … Yet, as so often in life, the perception of reality is far different than its actual circumstances."
Attorneys argued that Donaghy provided "valuable" information that reveals how referees' relationships with coaches and players influenced games, including one instance where "confidential information was secretly passed from another referee to a coach."
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"The NBA allowed an environment to exist that made inside information, including knowledge of the particular officials who would work a game, valuable in connection with predicting the outcome of games," the court documents state. "Other practices prevented games from being played on a level playing field."
Donaghy allegedly provided inside information to gamblers in about 100 games, including ones he officiated, starting in 2003. He got $2,000 for each correct pick, receiving $25,000 over one four-month period.
Donaghy, his attorneys said, kept his addiction a "dark secret," and risked his own finances, once losing $30,000 day-trading on a family investment account.
"Gambling became like a drug for Tim and drew him towards increasingly greater risk situations," according to the court documents.