football

Former Alabama defensive lineman facing charges for allegedly impersonating 3 NFL players to fraudulently obtain nearly $20M in loans

By Nick BrombergYahoo Sports

Per the Guardian, Davis allegedly impersonated Michael Penix Jr., Xavier McKinney and David Njoku and is set to plead guilty on April 27.

Former Alabama defensive lineman Luther Davis is facing federal charges for allegedly impersonating three NFL players to fraudulently receive loans in their names. Davis, a member of Alabama’s 2009 team that won the national championship, obtained almost $20 million in loans with a business partner. The players initials are only identified in the charging documents from the U.

S. District Court in the Northern District of Georgia, but the Guardian reports that the three are Atlanta Falcons QB Michael Penix Jr. , Green Bay Packers safety Xavier McKinney and current free agent TE David Njoku.

The players had no knowledge of the schemes as they were happening and Davis is reportedly set to plead guilty to the federal charges at a hearing on April 27. From the Guardian: “Beginning no later than in or around May 2023 and continuing through in or about October 2024, the defendant, Luther Davis, and CJ Evins, executed a scheme to fraudulently obtain millions of dollars in loans from multiple lenders, including, but not limited to, Aliya Sports and All Pro Capital Funding, by impersonating professional football players and falsely claiming those players were seeking multi-million dollar Loans,” federal prosecutors charged. The alleged scheme involved several stages.

First, Davis and Evins would register at the Georgia secretary of state companies with names closely related to the impersonated player’s name or initials, the CI filing said. They would allegedly open bank accounts for these fake companies, and then create fraudulent email accounts that were purportedly used by the players they were impersonating. Davis is accused of giving lenders fake identifications with the players’ names and also even dressing up to pretend to be the players for in-person meetings.