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Former Dolphins player Reshad Jones awarded settlement in fraud case
Reshad Jones, who spent nine seasons with the Miami Dolphins, settled his lawsuit against financial services Merrill Lynch.The former NFL safety was awarded $9.5 million after alleging a former financial advisor at the company defrauded him for an estimated $2.6 million. The settlement was agreed upon in August, but public reporting on the case was not made available until this week.According to a June 25 arrest report, Isaiah Williams -- Jones' former financial adviser and a former employee of Merrill Lynch -- used his position to gain access to Jones' personal financial accounts to steal $1.56 million in 133 separate transactions. Another $1.03 million was stolen through a complicated laundering scheme involving bank and cash app transfers between Williams and a Georgia-based woman, Octivia Monique Graham. Jones told investigators he had never met the woman.The settlement with Merrill Lynch took place in August but began receiving pickup this week, when Investment News reported on it. Jones, who played 10 NFL seasonsall with Miamioriginally sought $16 million in damages in his complaint, filed with the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), a private organization that oversees brokerage firms and is supervised by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COMThe two-time Pro Bowler accused his former financial advisor, Isaiah Thomas Williams Jr., of defrauding him. Without admitting or denying the allegations, Thomas voluntarily resigned from Merrill Lynch in December, according to FINRA records. Thomas is now prohibited from acting as a broker "or otherwise associating with a broker-dealer firm," according to FINRA, which says he did not cooperate with its investigation into the situation.EX-NFL STAR JAY CUTLER FACES LAWSUIT OVER DUI CRASH THAT LED TO JAIL SENTENCEWilliamss headaches did not begin and end with the FINRA complaint. He was also arrested in Florida in June, and charged with grand theft, fraud, and money laundering, according to Broward County criminal court records. Those records also show he was released in July on a $1 million bond.Williams allegedly stole the total of almost $2.6 million through 133 separate transactions, and with another individual, Octavia Graham, who was also charged in Broward County, court records show. Williams allegedly used the money for personal expenses, including strip clubs and airline tickets.In July, attorneys for JonesChase Carlson of Carlson Law and Jeff Sonn of Sonn Lawissued a statement calling the case "yet another troubling example of a professional athlete being exploited by a wealth management firm he trusted.""In this case, the wrongdoer was a Vice President at one of the worlds largest financial institutionsBank of Americas investment management division, Merrill Lynch," they said. The attorneys did not respond to a request for comment Friday.Jones, who last played in the NFL in 2019, is not nearly the first athlete to be defrauded by their financial advisor. Former Bulls forward Toni Kukoc is currently suing his former friend and financial advisor in Illinois for allegedly helping a Swiss bank embezzle more than $11 million from him over the course of multiple years. Ex-Spurs star Tim Duncan was also famously swindled out of millions of dollars by his former financial advisor in 2016."Its all too common for athletes to hand over the keys to their kingdom to a financial advisor," Kelly Richmond Pope, a professor of forensic accounting, told Front Office Sports earlier this year.She cautioned athletes: "Beware of anyone who tells you I have everything covered, dont worry."Follow Fox News Digitals sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
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