Former Basketball Players Fail to Cooperate with Sports Betting Investigation: NCAA

Earlier this month, the NCAA reported two former North Carolina A&T men’s basketball players did not cooperate with an investigation into potential sports betting violations — meaning the athletes are now ineligible to play. The NCAA notes that both men are no longer members of the school’s basketball program and are not currently competing in NCAA sports.

We have written before about how sports betting corrupts athletic programs and puts student-athletes at risk of harassment and bribery.

The national experiment with sports gambling has been a disaster for individuals and families, but it is also undermining athletic programs nationwide.

When gambling is introduced, fans have a financial stake in the game, and athletes have an incentive to change how they play. Officials may be tempted to cheat, and fans forget why they enjoyed sports in the first place. All of that is a problem.

The NCAA has opened investigations into dozens of student-athletes at multiple schools over the past couple of years. Players allegedly conspire to help each other win bets by underperforming in games.

Federal prosecutors recently announced indictments against 26 people in connection with an alleged bribery and point-shaving scheme to fix NCAA basketball games. One of the defendants has plead guilty to bribery and wire fraud in that case.

Sports betting is now legal in more than 30 states, and Arkansans wagered an average of nearly $1.8 million on it every day last year. That kind of gambling ruins lives, tears families apart, and hurts communities.

In February, the Arkansas Racing Commission approved sportsbook license applications by FanDuel and DraftKings — meaning the state will likely see more sports betting in the months to come.

Sports betting promises entertainment and easy money, but it isn’t a harmless pastime. As powerful corporations try to make gambling part of everyday life, it’s important for Arkansas to protect its citizens and families from predatory gambling. Otherwise, problem gambling will simply hurt more and more people in our state.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.

Scottish Parliament Rejects Euthanasia

Last week the Scottish Parliament reportedly rejected a proposal that would have made Scotland the first country in the U.K. to legalize assisted suicide.

Elected officials first proposed the Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill in 2024. The measure would have let medical professionals give lethal prescriptions to terminally ill adults who are deemed mentally competent and who have resided in Scotland for at least a year.

In January, the French Senate rejected a similar measure as well.

Despite the “safeguards” euthanasia’s supporters place in these types of laws, experience has shown that assisted suicide doesn’t help people who are sick or dying, and it doesn’t remain limited to a few cases.

Canada is poised to reach it’s 100,000th death through assisted suicide this summer.

Patients in Europe and Canada reportedly have been denied care or actively euthanized as a result of assisted suicide laws.

Recent news articles allege that an elderly woman in Ontario — dubbed “Mrs. B” in official reports — was euthanized against her will after her elderly husband began “experiencing caregiver burnout.” Her husband reportedly requested “an urgent assessment” of his wife’s eligibility for assisted suicide. She was euthanized that evening.

The vast majority of patients approved for assisted suicide never receive psychiatric screenings.

In parts of the U.S. where physician-assisted suicide is legal, insurance companies have refused to pay for patients’ medical care, but have offered to cover assisted suicide drugs.

Stories like these are part of the reason why Family Council has strongly opposed assisted suicide legislation in Arkansas.

Being pro-life means believing innocent human life is sacred from conception until natural death.

Just like abortion, euthanasia and assisted suicide violate the sanctity of innocent human life.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.