Indiana radio announcer arrested before IU-Purdue tipoff

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Bob Cook

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Todd Leary, former Indiana basketball player and current radio sidekick, gets arrested on real estate fraud charges -- on the Assembly Hall floor as he's getting ready for to announce the game.

http://www.indystar.com/article/20100205/SPORTS0601/2050413/Ex-IU-player-Leary-faces-fraud-charges

In some way, it makes sense that Leary is busted on fraud charges, considering the fraudulent reason Knight recruited him was as an (ultimately unsuccessful) lure to get Eric Montross.
 
Those cops must have been watching too much Law and Order. For a non-violent crime, there's no reason the police can't notify you to give yourself up and have it done nice and quiet at the police station, with your lawyer in tow. That's show-boating on their part.
 
Didn't he almost single-handedly beat Duke (in an eventual Indiana loss) in the Final Four with a bunch of late 3s? Is that him?
 
I agree Hondo. It would have been in good taste to do arrest him after the game in the bowels of Assembly Hall.

He missed a good game, though.
 
D-3 Fan said:
I agree Hondo. It would have been in good taste to do arrest him after the game in the bowels of Assembly Hall.

He missed a good game, though.

That's OT
 
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He's facing 15 Class B felony charges, each punishable by a minimum of six years and a maximum of 20 years in prison. If convicted on each, he could conceivably be sentenced to serve between 90 and 300 years in prison.

I have no problem with police making the arrest once the warrant is in hand and the suspect's location is known.

It is unusual once a felony warrant is issued to simply ask the person to turn themselves in. The same courtesy would not be given to someone charged with other non-violent felonies such as drug trafficking, or bribery.

Edit: changed the number of charges and years he's facing based on this story: http://www.news-sentinel.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100205/NEWS/2050335 Original number of charges had come from the IDS.
 
WaylonJennings said:
Didn't he almost single-handedly beat Duke (in an eventual Indiana loss) in the Final Four with a bunch of late 3s? Is that him?

That is the same guy. My earlier crack about his "fraudulent" recruitment aside, he turned out to be a fairly serviceable player at Indiana.
 
Bob Cook said:
In some way, it makes sense that Leary is busted on fraud charges, considering the fraudulent reason Knight recruited him was as an (ultimately unsuccessful) lure to get Eric Montross.
If that's the case, then former Michigan player Jason Bossard had better be looking over his shoulder.
 
hondo said:
Those cops must have been watching too much Law and Order. For a non-violent crime, there's no reason the police can't notify you to give yourself up and have it done nice and quiet at the police station, with your lawyer in tow. That's show-boating on their part.

Tough ****. Next time, don't defraud people and you don't have to worry about it.
 
TheSportsPredictor said:
hondo said:
Those cops must have been watching too much Law and Order. For a non-violent crime, there's no reason the police can't notify you to give yourself up and have it done nice and quiet at the police station, with your lawyer in tow. That's show-boating on their part.

Tough ****. Next time, don't defraud people and you don't have to worry about it.
Horse****. I don't care how many counts and how many felonies. If they're non-violent, give the guy a chance to turn himself in. These cops were probably high-fiving later on and bragging about how they marched into Assembly Hall and busted a former IU basketball player.
 
hondo said:
TheSportsPredictor said:
hondo said:
Those cops must have been watching too much Law and Order. For a non-violent crime, there's no reason the police can't notify you to give yourself up and have it done nice and quiet at the police station, with your lawyer in tow. That's show-boating on their part.

Tough ****. Next time, don't defraud people and you don't have to worry about it.
Horse****. I don't care how many counts and how many felonies. If they're non-violent, give the guy a chance to turn himself in. These cops were probably high-fiving later on and bragging about how they marched into Assembly Hall and busted a former IU basketball player.

Because non-violent offenders never abscond?
 
TheSportsPredictor said:
hondo said:
Those cops must have been watching too much Law and Order. For a non-violent crime, there's no reason the police can't notify you to give yourself up and have it done nice and quiet at the police station, with your lawyer in tow. That's show-boating on their part.

Tough ****. Next time, don't defraud people and you don't have to worry about it.
Damn, they had the trial already? That's some fast justice making there.
 
People arrest drug dealers at their place of business all the time. Why should radio announcers get a break?
 
hondo said:
Those cops must have been watching too much Law and Order. For a non-violent crime, there's no reason the police can't notify you to give yourself up and have it done nice and quiet at the police station, with your lawyer in tow. That's show-boating on their part.

I don't know, he is charged with a boatload of felonies. Lesser counts, maybe.
 
franticscribe said:
hondo said:
TheSportsPredictor said:
hondo said:
Those cops must have been watching too much Law and Order. For a non-violent crime, there's no reason the police can't notify you to give yourself up and have it done nice and quiet at the police station, with your lawyer in tow. That's show-boating on their part.

Tough ****. Next time, don't defraud people and you don't have to worry about it.
Horse****. I don't care how many counts and how many felonies. If they're non-violent, give the guy a chance to turn himself in. These cops were probably high-fiving later on and bragging about how they marched into Assembly Hall and busted a former IU basketball player.



Because non-violent offenders never abscond?

Oh please. Leary's a semi-famous figure in the state with deep ties there. I'm sure they knew where he lives, where he goes, and most everything else about him. He wasn't gonna disappear if they didn't arrest him that very second.

They chose to make the arrest in front of the Assembly Hall crowd right before he was supposed to go on the air broadcasting IU's biggest game of the year. Sure sounds like police grandstanding to me. I'm curious how the broadcast handled it.
 

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