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Ex-part owner of Minnesota Vikings gets more than six years in cryptocurrency scam

Reginald Fowler, 64, of Chandler, Arizona, was sentenced in a Manhattan federal court to six years and three months in prison.
Credit: AP
FILE - Arizona businessman Reggie Fowler addresses reporters after Minnesota Vikings owner Red McCombs announced the proposed sale of the team to Fowler, Feb. 14, 2005, in Eden Prairie, Minn. Fowler, a former part owner of the Vikings who defrauded a short-lived professional football league known as the Alliance of American Football while carrying out $700 million cryptocurrency scam was sentenced Monday, June 5, 2023, to over six years in prison.(AP Photo/Jim Mone, File)

NEW YORK — A former part-owner of the Minnesota Vikings who defrauded a short-lived professional football league known as the Alliance of American Football in a $700 million cryptocurrency scam was sentenced Monday to over six years in prison.

Reginald Fowler, 64, of Chandler, Arizona, was sentenced in a Manhattan federal court to six years and three months in prison and was ordered to forfeit $740 million and pay restitution of $53 million.

The Alliance of American Football met a speedy end in 2019 when it ran out of money.

Prosecutors said Fowler lied to the league's executives when he claimed to control bank accounts with tens of millions of dollars from real estate investments and government contracts that he could use to support the league.

In 2005, he tried to buy the NFL's Minnesota Vikings, becoming a minority owner before his involvement in the team ended in 2014.

U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said in a statement that Fowler broke the law by processing hundreds of millions of dollars of unregulated transactions on behalf of cryptocurrency exchanges that were used as a shadow bank.

"He did so by lying to legitimate U.S. financial institutions, which exposed the U.S. financial system to serious risk," Williams said. "He then victimized a professional football league by lying about his net worth in exchange for a substantial portion of the league."

In a sentencing submission, defense lawyer Edward Sapone wrote that Fowler was heartbroken that he let himself engage in crimes after over six decades of extraordinary contributions to family and community.

"Reggie is extremely remorseful," Sapone wrote. "The American Football League didn't benefit from the investment that Reggie had planned to make. Reggie's bank accounts were frozen, he could not secure the investment money, and he was not able to invest the large sum of money he promised to invest."

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