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Please explain.
Mauer was convicted of felony tax evasion in 2000. He served 5 months in federal prison and another 5 months of home arrest.
Somehow, he didn't lose his job. I'd like to know why. For a league with integrity problems in terms of officiating, I think pointing out Mauer's felonious past after last night's debacle is worthy of being a topic of discussion. I don't care that he served his time; I do care that the NBA employs tax cheats as officials, who then proceed to kick people out of front row seats that cost a lot of money.
So felons shouldn't be allowed to work?
Granted if he ever applies for a job as an accountant or a tax preparer I hope they don't license him, but what does cheating on his taxes have to do with calling a basketball game?
So felons shouldn't be allowed to work?
Granted if he ever applies for a job as an accountant or a tax preparer I hope they don't license him, but what does cheating on his taxes have to do with calling a basketball game?
In 2000, Mauer was convicted of a felony, three counts of tax evasion, and one count of obstruction of justice for not reporting downgraded airline tickets as income to the Internal Revenue Service.[3] Mauer failed to pay taxes on $26,500 of additional income over a three-year period.[3] Mauer was one of two NBA referees who chose not to plea bargain his case believing that there was an injustice done against him.[3] Mauer stated that he never intended to commit a criminal act and his accountants signed off on his tax returns and was not told of any issues.[3] In April 2001, Mauer was sentenced to five months in jail, five months of home detention, three years of supervised release, and 800 hours of community service.[5] At the conclusion of the trial, Mauer said, "I'm proud that I stood up for myself. At the same time, I'm relieved that it turned out this way. This is the first decent day I've had in a year and a half. This summer is going to be hard, serving my sentence. But I'm going to turn it into a positive thing. I'm going to help the kids, I'll get into shape."
So felons shouldn't be allowed to work?
Granted if he ever applies for a job as an accountant or a tax preparer I hope they don't license him, but what does cheating on his taxes have to do with calling a basketball game?
There are felonies and there are FELONIES. Maurer's felony doesn't really seem to be much of a much.
Why wasn't this thread started last week, though? It seems like sour grapes at this point.
Ed O.
Also note that Mauer was the official in the first Utah game here. He was booed thru an entire timeout in the first half.
Kenny had an ax to grind last night and will probably do it again the next time in the Garden.

If I am at the next Mauer game, I'm holding up a sign that says "Ken Mauer is a convicted felon". I wonder how that will go over with the RG crowd?![]()
However, I didn't have real reason to question Ken Mauer's integrity until witnessing him first-hand last night.
I think instead of these refs suck, a "You're a Felon" chant would be amusing to me.
It would be even better if Stern was at the game. Or course, last night the deputy commissioner was there, and it didn't matter in terms of objectivity.
Well, you could argue that bears on his integrity? I think that's pretty important for a referee in a professional sport that is bet upon a great deal.
Felons shouldn't be barred by law from work, but I think it would be reasonable for the NBA to be reluctant to hire convicted cheats to ref games.
Are you serious?
OK, I remember this cluster-chuck.
The league gave the refs first class plane tickets to travel to games. The refs traded them in for cheaper tickets, and pocketed the difference. Quite a few of the refs never declared the extra income on their taxes.
Most tax evasion cases are handled as *civil* matters, not *criminal*. In this case, the IRS was out to make an example of a high profile target. At first, the NBA made noises about taking tough action against any ref involved. Then the refs spilled the beans - the NBA had expressly given its' blessing to the practice!
That didn't deter the IRS, but it left the NBA exposed to a lawsuit if it actually fired the refs. Simply put, the refs got their jobs back in exchange for Stern not winding up in a witness box.
Oh, and I do mean "refs"...plural. Mauer was not alone. There are 10 or 12 guys working games that the IRS considers "felons". Take that FWIW.
That is Heath Franklin on the Ronnie Johns Half Hour, performing a parody of Eric Bana in the movie Chopper; which was based on the real "Chopper" Read, an Australian standover man.Who is this guy Chopper?
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=STANDOVER MANThanks, kind of, but now I have to ask, what's a standover man? It's probably Australian slang.
Thief who specializes in persuading other thieves to surrender their valuable items.
From the website of Mark Brandon "Chopper" Read:
"My apprenticeship in crime began in the 1970s. This had me robbing massage parlours and taking on contracts to maim and kill rivals. Once I had obtained a doctorate as a "standover man", robbing drug dealers and other criminals, who funnily enough couldn't report me to the police, became childs play. I once told a friend "why rob a straight guy of $20 when you can rob a drug dealer of $10,000 and he can't go running to the police?" After all both involved some work on my behalf, but the man in the street was less likely to give up his $20 as he had to work hard for it. For the drug-dealers it came easy, so why would they put up a fight. Although some of my victims chose to chew razor blades (at their own request of course), before they would hand over cash? And I am the psychopath!
Who is this guy Chopper? And what's the difference between a convicted felon and a felon?
And because of this fiasco it is extremely likely that Mauer HATES Stern and the New York office of the NBA. Those guys tried to hang him and his cohorts out to dry. As it was, Mauer and the other dudes lost a bunch of money and had their name dragged through the mud. At what point does Mauer think, "how do I get my money back?".OK, I remember this cluster-chuck.
The league gave the refs first class plane tickets to travel to games. The refs traded them in for cheaper tickets, and pocketed the difference. Quite a few of the refs never declared the extra income on their taxes.
Most tax evasion cases are handled as *civil* matters, not *criminal*. In this case, the IRS was out to make an example of a high profile target. At first, the NBA made noises about taking tough action against any ref involved. Then the refs spilled the beans - the NBA had expressly given its' blessing to the practice!
That didn't deter the IRS, but it left the NBA exposed to a lawsuit if it actually fired the refs. Simply put, the refs got their jobs back in exchange for Stern not winding up in a witness box.
Oh, and I do mean "refs"...plural. Mauer was not alone. There are 10 or 12 guys working games that the IRS considers "felons". Take that FWIW.
BGrantFan--so I can avoid being a convicted felon if I plea bargain guilty to a lesser felony and get convicted of that? So then I'm neither a felon nor a convicted felon, I'm just a convicted lesser felon?
