CEO of Oak View Group, which operates Tanger Center & First Horizon Coliseum, indicted for bid rigging in Texas
According to the Department of Justice, Timothy J. Leiweke, the Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Oak View Group, has been indicted for 'orchestrating a conspiracy to rig the bidding process for an arena at a public university in Austin, Texas.'
OVG 'develops and provides a variety of services to live entertainment venues,' including running the Steven Tanger Center and the 'Greensboro Complex,' a cluster of event venues once known as Greensboro Coliseum.
OVG took over the venues last year, taking over from the city of Greensboro, which had previously operated the venues.
The indictment alleges that from February 2018 through at least June 2024, Leiweke conspired with a competitor's CEO 'to rig the bidding for the development, management, and use of a multi-purpose arena that was to be located on the campus of a public university in Austin, Texas.'
'Timothy Leiweke allegedly led a scheme designed to steer the contract for entertainment services at a public university's arena to his company. Public contracts are subject to laws requiring an open and competitive bid process to ensure a level playing field,' said Assistant Director in Charge Christopher G. Raia of the FBI New York Field Office. 'The FBI is determined to ensure that those who disregard fair competition principles do not benefit from a rigged bidding process targeting our communities and public institutions.'
Leiweke allegedly convinced the CEO of the competitor not to put in a bid on the project in exchange for subcontracts. As a result, OVG was the only qualified bid and won the project.
'The arena opened to the public in April 2022, and OVG continues to receive significant revenues from the project to date,' the DOJ says. 'OVG and Legends Hospitality have agreed to pay $15 million and $1.5 million in penalties, respectively, in connection with the conduct alleged in the indictment against Leiweke.'
A spokesperson for Leiweke provided the following statement, as well:
Mr. Leiweke has done nothing wrong and will vigorously defend himself and his well-deserved reputation for fairness and integrity. The Antitrust Division's allegations are wrong on the law and the facts, and the case should never have been brought. The law is clear: vertical, complementary business partnerships, like the one contemplated between OVG and Legends, are legal. These allegations blatantly ignore established legal precedent and seek to criminalize common teaming efforts that are proven to enhance competition and benefit the public. The Moody Center is a perfect example, as it has resulted in substantial and sustained benefits to the University of Texas and the City of Austin.
Leiweke is charged with a violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act. He faces up to 10 years in prison and $1 million in criminal fines.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
7 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Ex-Miami Heat employee accused of stealing jerseys worth millions — including LeBron James'
A former Miami Heat security officer has been accused in federal court of stealing millions of dollars worth of team memorabilia — including a game-worn LeBron James jersey from the 2013 NBA Finals — and selling them to online brokers. Appearing Wednesday at U.S. Superior Court for the Southern District of Florida, retired Miami police officer Marcus Thomas Perez pleaded not guilty to the felony charge of transporting and transferring stolen goods in interstate commerce. Perez, 62, faces up to 10 years in prison and a maximum fine of $250,000. His attorney, Robert Buschel, declined to comment when asked on Wednesday by The Times. Read more: Hernández: Lakers' commitment to Luka Doncic raises questions about LeBron James' role According to a press release by the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Florida and the Miami field office of the FBI, Perez worked on game-day security detail for the Heat from 2016-2021, and later worked as an NBA security employee from 2022-2025. While employed by the Heat, the press release states, Perez "was among a limited number of trusted individuals with access to a secured equipment room" where "hundreds of game-worn jerseys and other memorabilia" were being stored to be displayed at a future Heat museum. "During his employment, Perez accessed the equipment room multiple times to steal over 400 game-worn jerseys and other items, which he then sold to various online marketplaces," the press release states. "Over a three-year period, Perez sold over 100 stolen items for approximately $2 million and shipped them across state lines, often for prices well below their market value." Read more: LeBron James and Maverick Carter meet with Nikola Jokic's agent, who is starting a new league One example listed in the press release is the jersey that James wore in Game 7 of the 2013 NBA Finals, during which the Heat defeated the San Antonio Spurs 95-88 to win their second straight championship. Perez allegedly sold the jersey for around $100,000; it was sold in an online auction for $3.7 million in 2023. In executing a search warrant at Perez's home April 3, law enforcement "seized nearly 300 additional stolen game-worn jerseys and memorabilia," all of which the Heat confirmed had been stolen from their facility, according to the press release. Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.


The Hill
8 minutes ago
- The Hill
Paxton opens door to FBI involvement in Texas fight after initial pushback
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) on Wednesday signaled he was open to getting the FBI involved in the redistricting battle after initially pushing back on arguments for the law enforcement agency to intervene. 'I'm in full support of using every possible method to secure a quorum and hold lawless Democrat legislators accountable for abandoning Texans, including involving federal authorities and the FBI,' Paxton said in a statement to The Hill. His comments come after an appearance he made on Steve Bannon's 'War Room' podcast on Tuesday, in which he criticized Sen. John Cornyn's (R-Texas) call to have the FBI help bring back Texas Democrats who had left the state to break quorum, thereby stalling GOP efforts to advance newly drawn congressional maps. 'Let me first say, this is a state issue,' Paxton said, when asked by Bannon about the state of play in Texas and calls for the FBI to get involved. 'I don't know what the FBI would have to do with this, nothing. This is a purely state issue, so we are focused on alternatives that we can implement at the state level,' Paxton continued. Paxton noted that one of those options would be to arrest the lawmakers. He noted that if lawmakers don't return when the legislature meets on Friday, 'then we are going to file motions to try to remove some of these legislators from office.' Bannon asked Paxton if arresting the lawmakers meant having Texas Rangers travel to Illinois to arrest the Texas Democrats who fled or if the rangers needed to be within the state to arrest lawmakers. 'So Steve, I can tell you in a couple days exactly what that means,' Paxton said. 'I can't tell you right now. It's part of what's going on.' Paxton's apparent reversal on the issue comes as he mounts an increasingly tense primary challenge against Cornyn in next year's Senate race. Cornyn, who has trailed Paxton in recent polls, wrote a letter to FBI Director Kash Patel on Tuesday urging the FBI to try and help Republicans bring back Democrats who fled the state earlier this week. 'The FBI has tools to aid state law enforcement when parties cross state lines, including to avoid testifying or fleeing a scene of a crime,' Cornyn wrote. 'Specifically, I am concerned that legislators who solicited or accepted funds to aid in their efforts to avoid their legislative duties may be guilty of bribery or other public corruption offenses.' President Trump said later on Tuesday that the FBI 'may have to' get involved. 'No, I know they want them back, not only the attorney general, the governor wants them back,' the president said. 'If you look, I mean, the governor of Texas is demanding they come back. So, a lot of people are demanding they come back.' Paxton announced on Tuesday that he would be seeking judicial orders 'declaring that runaway Democrats who fail to appear by the Speaker's deadline have vacated their office.' 'The people of Texas elected lawmakers, not jet-setting runaways looking for headlines. If you don't show up to work, you get fired,' Paxton said. But Abbott has already started the process of removing lawmakers, filing an emergency petition on Tuesday to the Texas Supreme Court in an effort to oust Texas House Democratic Caucus Leader Gene Eu from his seat. Paxton has been running to Cornyn's right in the race. The primary is the latest in a nasty and long-simmering battle between the two men. Cornyn campaign senior adviser Matt Mackowiak criticized Paxton's initial comments on Bannon's podcast, saying in a statement that he was 'undermining President Trump and Sen. Cornyn's effort to enlist the FBI to give Texas law enforcement additional tools to locate and return these AWOL Democratic House members.' 'Memo to Ken Paxton: The adults who are in Texas and on the job will handle it from here. Go back to the hotel pool,' he added. Paxton hit back at Mackowiak, calling Cornyn and his campaign 'transparently desperate.' 'While I'm focused on doing everything in my power to actually solve the problem, John Cornyn and his team are obsessively making bizarre posts about me on X,' Paxton said. 'It's so transparently desperate that you almost have to feel bad for him.'


Axios
8 minutes ago
- Axios
Nation's violent crime rate fell in 2024 to lowest in 20 years: FBI
The nation's violent and property crime rates dropped to a two-decade low in 2024, following the COVID-era surge in homicides, according to new FBI data released this week. Why it matters: The numbers show crime was heading toward a 20-year record low in the last year of the Biden administration, despite President Trump's false campaign claims that President Biden was overseeing a nationwide crime spike. The big picture: The new FBI numbers released Tuesday also come as preliminary data from the country's largest cities in 2025 so far suggest violent crime is falling even more and could be heading to modern record lows. By the numbers: The U.S. had a violent crime rate of 359.1 per 100,000 residents last year, the FBI said. That surpassed the lowest violent crime rate the nation has had since 2014, when it was 372.4 per 100,000 residents, and many cities saw 30-year lows, an Axios analysis found. The rate was 370.4 in 2021, but that year the FBI collected data using two reporting systems, which makes the year not comparable. Meanwhile, the nation's property crime rate dropped to 1760.1 per 100,000 residents last year. That's also a 20-year low, according to an Axios analysis of FBI numbers. Zoom in: Overall violent crime dropped by 4.5% and all property crime decreased 8.1% from 2024 to 2023, the FBI said. Murder and non-negligent manslaughter fell 14.9% during the same period. Automobile theft went down a staggering 18.6%, FBI data showed. The intrigue: The FBI announcement made no mention of crime rates falling to 20-year lows — and didn't give out the crime rates per 100,000 residents as it does each year. The FBI also didn't say what was behind the drops. Context: Violent crime ticked up early in Biden's term, but reports show it's dropped significantly since then as law enforcement agencies responded to the pandemic surge and adopted more detailed recordkeeping. Throughout the 2024 campaign, Trump repeated false claims that immigration had sparked rising crime nationwide — a reason he gave for his mass deportation plan. What they're saying:"As the pandemic receded, criminal justice experts fully expected crime to decline," Insha Rahman, vice president of advocacy and partnerships at the Vera Institute of Justice, told Axios. Rahman said the crime drops occurred, even while police staffing levels have declined in the past five years by around 5% nationwide. "What's driving these unprecedented gains in community safety is the government investment in community infrastructure from the 2021 American Rescue Plan Act and the 2022 Bipartisan Safer Communities Act." Yes, but: The 2024 year-end data follows the Justice Department's April cancellation of $820 million in grants that had supported over 550 organizations focused on crime prevention research and services. What we're watching: The Major Cities Chiefs Association (MCCA) will continue to issue quarterly preliminary violent crime data from nearly 70 large cities.