Former Louisville basketball assistant coach Dino Gaudio federally charged for attempt to extort program
Senior college football writer
Graduate of the University of Georgia Covers college basketball
Former Louisville basketball assistant coach Dino Gaudio has been charged with one federal count of attempting to extort money and other things of value from the university, according to information released Tuesday by Michael Bennett, the acting U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Kentucky.
According to the charge, Gaudio, during an in-person meeting with Louisville officials on March 17, threatened to report to the media allegations that the University of Louisville men s basketball program had violated [NCAA] rules in its production of recruiting videos for prospective student-athletes and its use of graduate assistants in practice, unless the University of Louisville paid [Gaudio] his salary for an additional 17 months or provided the lump sum equivalent of 17 months of
Don t miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) â Federal authorities have charged a former University of Louisville assistant basketball coach with attempting to extort the university after his dismissal from the team.
Dino Gaudio threatened to go to the media with alleged NCAA violations by the team, according to a charging document filed in federal court.
During a March 17 meeting with team personnel, Gaudio said he would expose alleged violations by the team âin its production of recruiting videos for prospective student-athletes and in the use of its graduate assistants in practices,â according to the document filed in Louisville on Tuesday.
Ex-Louisville assistant Dino Gaudio charged with extortion
Field Level Media
19 May 2021, 12:40 GMT+10
Dino Gaudio, a former Louisville assistant coach, was charged by federal authorities with one count of interstate communication with intent to extort after alleging seeking a significant sum of money from the university after the school dismissed him in March.
Per court papers released Tuesdayby Michael Bennett, acting U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Kentucky, Gaudio met with school officials on March 17 after he was let go by head coach Chris Mack and threatened to leak an array of alleged NCAA recruiting violations unless he was paid his prior salary for 17 months or given one lump-sum payment.