Nevin Shapiro

Birthday April 13, 1969

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Brooklyn, New York City, U.S.

Age 54 years old

Nationality United States

Height 165 cm

#26970 Most Popular

1969

Nevin Karey Shapiro (born April 13, 1969) is a convicted felon who received a 20-year prison sentence for orchestrating a $930 million Ponzi scheme.

According to interviews, he allegedly engaged in rampant violations of NCAA rules over eight years as a booster for University of Miami athletes.

Shapiro allegedly provided football players cash, goods, prostitutes, and assorted favors.

Shapiro was born in Brooklyn on April 13, 1969, to a Jewish family and moved with his family to Miami Beach, Florida at an early age.

1986

He graduated in 1986 from Miami Beach Senior High School.

Shapiro, who is 5 feet, 5 inches tall, was a member of the school's basketball and wrestling teams.

Shapiro started Capitol Investments USA, which he claimed bought wholesale groceries and shipped them to more expensive markets, although he said that he never actually sold the groceries.

Shapiro's Ponzi scheme was based on attracting investors to Capitol Investments.

He promised investors they would make 10 to 26 percent commissions every month.

2002

In 2002, Shapiro paid $1.5 million for a 30 percent stake in a sports management company called Axcess Sports, founded by Michael Huyghue.

The agency signed several Miami Hurricanes football players, including Vince Wilfork.

Shapiro was reported to have spent $2 million from 2002 to 2010 boosting University of Miami sports, primarily football, but also included contact with the basketball team under Frank Haith.

To date, 72 University of Miami football players are alleged by Shapiro to have received impermissible benefits from him between 2002 and 2010, including Wilfork, Jon Beason, Antrel Rolle, Devin Hester, Willis McGahee, and the late Sean Taylor.

In response to the allegations, the University of Miami imposed significant penalties on itself, including the suspension of eight football players, and removed itself from post-season bowl contention for one year.

2003

In 2003, his business grew quickly through connections with Sherwin Jarol in Chicago, Craig Currie in New Jersey, and Sydney "Jack" Williams, who had real estate in Naples, Florida and Indianapolis.

2005

The FBI reported that he had diverted $35 million for his personal use from 2005 to 2009.

Shapiro allegedly rented his yacht to NBA players Shaquille O'Neal, Dwyane Wade, and Kevin Garnett and pledged $150,000 to the University of Miami to have his name placed on the student lounge.

2009

The scheme fell apart in November 2009 during the 2008-09 recession when Chicago real estate investor Sherwin Jarol sued to force him into involuntary bankruptcy after Shapiro had stopped making payments to his investors.

More than 60 investors, largely from Naples, Indianapolis, and Chicago, including Barry Alvarez, had invested $600,000 in the scheme.

2010

According to FBI Special Agent Gregory Yankow in a Federal Criminal Complaint dated April 20, 2010 (Case No. 10-8082), Shapiro "directed others to create and show to the investors documents fraudulently touting Capitol's profitability. Those documents included: financial statements; profit and loss figures fraudulently representing that Capitol's wholesale grocery business was generating tens of millions of dollars in annual sales; personal and business tax returns for Shapiro and Capitol also fraudulently reflecting those sales; and numerous invoices fraudulently reflecting transactions between Capitol and other companies in the wholesale grocery business."

According to the criminal complaint, Shapiro incurred "millions of dollars in debts resulting from illegal gambling on sporting events; more than $400,000 for floor seats to the Miami Heat professional basketball team; approximately $26,000 monthly for mortgage payments on his residence in Miami Beach, which was recently appraised at approximately $5.3 million; approximately $7,250 monthly for payments on a $1.5 million Riviera yacht; approximately $4,700 monthly for the lease of a Mercedes-Benz automobile;" and an undisclosed amount "for a pair of diamond-studded handcuffs, which he gifted to a prominent professional athlete."

On April 21, 2010, he was charged in New Jersey with securities fraud and money laundering.

On September 15, 2010, he pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge Susan D. Wigenton in Newark, New Jersey in U.S. v. Shapiro, 10-cr-00471, to one count of securities fraud and one count of money laundering.

In August 2010, Shapiro told the Miami Herald that he was writing a book The Real U: 2001 to 2010 Inside the Eye of the Hurricane in which he promised to tell how the University of Miami had violated NCAA rules affecting more than 100 players.

"Once the players turned pro, they turned their back on me. It made me feel like a used friend," he said.

2011

On June 7, 2011, he was sentenced to 20 years in federal prison and ordered to make $82,657,362.29 in restitution.

On August 16, 2011, in a jailhouse interview with Yahoo! sports writer Charles Robinson conducted over 100 hours, Shapiro made good on his promise for revelations, exposing a lack of NCAA-mandated institutional oversight at the university that apparently allowed his illegal and unethical behavior to continue unimpeded for years.

2013

On October 22, 2013, after a two-and-a-half year of investigation, the NCAA announced that the University of Miami football team would be docked three scholarships in each of the next three seasons, a three-year probation, recruiting restrictions, a five-game suspension for the Miami Hurricanes men's basketball coach, and a two-year show-cause order on a total of three former assistant football and basketball coaches.

Considering such a long investigation yielded very little incriminating evidence, it was widely viewed that the NCAA investigation and the media attention to the case did not match the relatively minor infractions that were proven to be committed.

Before the NCAA penalties were announced, it was revealed that NCAA enforcement staff paid Shapiro's lawyer $25,000 to call in University of Miami personnel during an unassociated legal deposition for Shapiro's bankruptcy, and ask a specific list of questions related to the university's scandal.

Shapiro's attorney used her subpoena power in the bankruptcy case to question two witnesses who were crucial to the NCAA's case.

The NCAA had no subpoena power, and neither witness had any obligation to talk to the association.

2020

Shapiro was transferred from federal prison to home confinement on June 11, 2020, where he will continue to serve out the remainder of his 20-year sentence under monitoring by the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP).

The transfer comes on the heels of recent federal prison directives to move some at-risk inmates to home confinement in the face of COVID-19 outbreaks.

Shapiro, who was 51 at the time, was aided by having served over 50 percent of his sentence, while also demonstrating hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and hypertension, both of which put him at a higher risk of life-threatening complication if he were to contract coronavirus.

Shapiro was transferred to the home of a family member.

He will be monitored electronically by the Bureau of Prisons and subject to a range of the bureau's guidelines, which included a ban on the consumption of alcohol, random drug testing, and a monitored walking radius near the residence, and other criteria.

He will also be required to wear an ankle monitor at all times.

He will be eligible to hold a job, although any work would require approval through the bureau and his earnings will be garnished to repay remaining restitution to his victims.

Shapiro also faces a civil case in Miami, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission v. Shapiro, 10-cv-21281.