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pr_capone
11-18-2010, 01:11 PM
http://sports.espn.go.com/ncaa/news/story?id=5821082


KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Federal prosecutors charged five former University of Kansas employees Thursday with conspiring to steal more than $2 million in tickets to athletic events in a scandal that embarrassed the school and likely led to the early departure of athletic director Lew Perkins.

Prosecutors singled out former associate athletic director Charlette Blubaugh, who was in charge of the ticket office. They said she began stealing tickets in 2005 and gave them to other key athletic department employees to sell, either personally or through third parties.

Blubaugh, 43, of Medford, Okla., was charged along with her husband, Thomas Blubaugh, 46, who was a consultant to the ticket office.

Also charged were former assistant athletic director Rodney Jones, 42, of Lawrence; former associate athletic director Ben Kirtland, 54, of Lenexa, Kan.; and Kassie Liebsch, 28, of Lawrence, who was a systems analyst working in the ticket office.

Two other former employees, Brandon Simmons and Jason Jeffries, have pleaded guilty to their roles in the scheme and are scheduled to be sentenced in federal court in March.

Investigators said the conspirators made between $3 million and $5 million in the scheme over five years.

Revelations of the ticket scam earlier this year angered many big-time donors who had been meeting exorbitant dollar demands for the privilege of buying premium tickets in always sold-out Allen Fieldhouse. Under an unpopular system imposed by Perkins to raise money, seating was allocated on a points system based on how much a fan donated to the Williams Fund, the money-raising arm of the athletic department.

The best seats were supposed to go to the people who made the biggest donations. That alone caused resentment, especially among older followers who had occupied good seats for years and were unable to meet the new demands. Many wondered whether others had gotten good seats simply by purchasing tickets sold in the scam.

Perkins retired in September, a year earlier than previously planned. While never accused of having anything to do with the ticket scam, he nevertheless admitted he had been guilty of poor oversight and said it was the most embarrassing thing that had happened in his 40-year career.

A report conducted by a Wichita law firm and released in May said five Kansas athletics staffers and a consultant -- none of whom still work for the university -- sold or used at least 17,609 men's basketball tickets, 2,181 football tickets and a number of parking passes and other passes for personal purposes.

The report showed that more than $887,000 in basketball tickets and more than $122,000 worth of football tickets were involved.

"Being on the athletics side, the simplest way to try to describe this is that there was a curveball thrown and I missed it," Perkins said in May. "I missed that curveball. It got by. We had the wrong people hired for the wrong jobs."

The report found no wrongdoing in the points system and said the scheme's actual effect on tickets awarded was minimal.

The investigation began in March amid reports that tickets to Jayhawk basketball games -- both at Allen Fieldhouse and in NCAA tournaments -- were being scalped by officials within the athletic department.

The report suggested that Jones, former director of the Williams Fund who helped determine who got premium seats at Kansas home games, was a key player in the scandal. Kirtland, who was the school's associate athletic director of development, told investigators that Jones "was always on the lookout for development tickets."

The report blamed Kirtland for helping create "an atmosphere similar to a worker in a candy store" when it came to work with the tickets.

It also said Charlette Blubaugh, who was in charge of the ticket office and was the manager most familiar with the ticketing software, played a major role.

The indictment said the scheme included entering false information into a computer system designed to prevent tickets from being stolen, paying kickbacks to third parties not connected to the ticket office to sell tickets, and concealing the receipt of outside income on reports required by the NCAA.

Jones' attorney, Gerald Handley, said he had not seen the indictment and had no comment. It was not immediately clear if the other four had attorneys.

Phone messages left for Perkins and Kirtland were not immediately returned. The Williams Fund directed questions to associate athletic director Jim Marchiony, who also didn't immediately return a call.

No phone number was listed for Thomas and Charlette Blubaugh, Jones or Liebsch.

WebGem
11-18-2010, 02:15 PM
Stole $3-5 million in tickets? wtf? gg freedom

CrazyPhuD
11-18-2010, 03:05 PM
People pay for KU football tickets?

cdirty
11-18-2010, 03:06 PM
my friend told me a rumor that Bradys dad was going to get indicted as well in this. I told him to fuck off.

BWillie
11-18-2010, 04:44 PM
Where's Roger?

mikeyis4dcats.
11-18-2010, 04:56 PM
sooooooo...you 'spose Kassie still has a job right about now?

HemiEd
11-18-2010, 04:59 PM
Wow, they got stupid greedy.

BWillie
11-18-2010, 10:36 PM
And they would have got away with it to if it wasn't for those meddling kids