Norbert and Walter Meyer Buy Their Father’s Jazz Club
6/15/1952
Norby and Walter Walters Open Nightclub
1/15/1966
Walters Nightclub Prostitution
7/20/1967
Michael Franzese Quits College to Join Mob
7/15/1972
Walters Pays Michael Franzese for Mob Protection
2/15/1975
Michael Franzese Becomes a Made Man
10/31/1975
Sonny Franzese Confirms 50/50 Agency Partnership with Walters
12/15/1979
Michael Franzese Becomes a Caporegime
10/15/1981
Ronnie Harmon’s High School Wins the P.S.A.L. Championship
11/21/1981
Ronnie Harmon’s High School Loses the Metro Bowl
12/5/1981
Ronnie Harmon Named Queens Player of the Year
12/5/1981
Ronnie Harmon Commits to Iowa
Ronnie Harmon signs a National Letter of Intent to play for the University of Iowa and receives a full scholarship. 18
12/10/1981
Michael Franzese Expands to DelRay Beach, Florida
Michael Franzese expands his operation to Florida to get involved in movie production. 19
5/15/1983
Bloom Proposes Sports Agent Business to Walters
5/15/1984
Michael Franzese Moves to Los Angeles
Michael Franzese moves to Los Angeles. His goal is to grow his film production business. 21
6/15/1984
Walters Asks Franzese to Join Sports Agent Business
12/15/1984
Colombo Mob Approves Michael Franzese’s Plans
1/15/1985
Michael Franzese Partners With Walters
2/15/1985
Ronnie Harmon Flies to New York, Meets Walters
3/9/1985
Ronnie Harmon Signs Walters Contract, Takes $2,500 Cash
3/10/1985
Walters Wires Harmon $250
Norby Walters sends Ronnie Harmon $250 (worth $705 today) via Western Union. 30
4/8/1985
Walters Wires Harmon $200
Norby Walters sends Ronnie Harmon $200 (worth $565 today) via Western Union. 31
5/3/1985
Walters Wires Harmon $600
Norby Walters sends Ronnie Harmon $600 (worth $1,690 today) via Western Union. 32
5/14/1985
Giants General Manager Visits Walters
5/15/1985
U.S. Attorney Dan Webb Resigns
6/15/1985
Walters Wires Harmon $500
Norby Walters sends Ronnie Harmon $500 (worth $1,410 today) via Western Union. 36
6/24/1985
Walters Wires Harmon $500
Norby Walters sends Ronnie Harmon $500 (worth $1,410 today) via Western Union. 37
6/25/1985
Michael Franzese Remarried in Los Angeles
Michael Franzese marries Camille Garcia in Los Angeles. 38
7/25/1985
Walters Wires Harmon $250
Norby Walters sends Ronnie Harmon $250 (worth $705 today) via Western Union. 39
8/3/1985
Michael Franzese Provides $50,000 Cash to Walters
8/15/1985
Harmon Lies to NCAA
8/25/1985
Harmon Lies to the Big Ten
8/25/1985
Walters Wires Harmon $250
Norby Walters sends Ronnie Harmon $250 (worth $705 today) via Western Union. 44
9/3/1985
Walters Wires Harmon $250
Norby Walters sends Ronnie Harmon $250 (worth $705 today) via Western Union. 45
10/2/1985
Walters Wires Harmon $250
Norby Walters sends Ronnie Harmon $250 (worth $705 today) via Western Union. 46
11/4/1985
Franzese Tells Walters to Use Campione
12/1/1985
Walters Wires Harmon $250
Norby Walters sends Ronnie Harmon $250 (worth $705 today) via Western Union. 48
12/2/1985
Walters Wires Harmon $250
Norby Walters sends Ronnie Harmon $250 (worth $705 today) via Western Union. 49
12/6/1985
Walters Wires Harmon $250
Norby Walters sends Ronnie Harmon $250 (worth $705 today) via Western Union. 50
12/16/1985
Franzese Indicted
12/18/1985
Franzese Surrenders
12/20/1985
Harmon Looks Forward to Getting Out of Iowa
12/23/1985
Harmon Costs Walters an Additional $15,657
12/31/1985
1986 Rose Bowl Game®
1/1/1986
Ronnie Harmon Quits College
1/10/1986
Michael Franzese Pleads Guilty
3/21/1986
Walters Leases Mercedes for Harmon
Norby Walters pays $30,000 (worth $81,000 today) to lease a Mercedes Benz 560 SEC, valued at $64,000 (worth $174,000 today), for Ronnie Harmon. 62
5/15/1986
Michael Franzese to Prison
After bouncing checks to the U.S. Marshall’s service to pay for his monitoring under his plea agreement, Michael Franzese is sent to Terminal Island San Pedro prison in Los Angeles, CA. 63
6/15/1986
Harmon Signs NFL Contract for $1.35 Million
8/12/1986
Michael Franzese Signs Cooperation Agreement With Feds
11/7/1986
Bloom Threatens Kathy Clements
1/16/1987
Walters Requests Mob Extortion and Assault Services
2/15/1987
Norby Walters Admits Paying College Athletes
3/12/1987
Colleges Open Investigations
At least five colleges opened investigations to determine whether Walters had dealt with their players: Florida, Alabama, Auburn, Michigan State and Ohio State. 71
3/13/1987
Sports Agent Kathy Clements Assaulted
3/16/1987
Norby Walters Makes Short Trip to Chicago
3/17/1987
FBI Opens Probe on Walters and Bloom
The FBI is investigating alleged threats and violence involving sports agents and players. According to a number of sources familiar with the investigation, Norby Walters and Lloyd Bloom, two New York agents, are among the subjects of the inquiry. 74
3/26/1987
Walters Files Lawsuits Against College Athletes
Walters files lawsuits against former college athletes Brent Fullwood of Auburn and Terrence Flagler of Clemson, alleging that the college athletes signed contracts and accepted money before their senior seasons – violations of NCAA rules – and then reneged on the contracts. 75
3/27/1987
UW Athlete Reggie Rogers Files Lawsuit Against Walters
University of Washington defensive end Reggie Rogers, in a lawsuit filed against Walters, gave this account of a meeting with the agent in December: Walters opened his briefcase, and said, “I came prepared,” took $5,000 cash out of the briefcase and spread it across the living room floor in front of Rogers. Walters allegedly told Rogers he would not be breaking NCAA rules by accepting the money and signing a contract. 76
4/28/1987
Federal Grand Jury Convenes
5/19/1987
Athletes May Face Fraud and Tax Evasion Charges
College athletes allegedly involved with Walters and Bloom were told by a U.S. Attorney that they could face up to one year in jail for fraud and tax evasion. 78
5/20/1987
Harmon and McKey Investigated for Points Shaving
6/7/1987
Athletes Offered Plea Deal
Athletes implicated in the grand jury investigation may have an opportunity to avoid prosecution if they accept a “pre-trial diversion” program that includes community service. 80
6/10/1987
Pitt to Declare Gladman and Austin Ineligible
Two football players with eligibility remaining at the University of Pittsburgh, Charles Gladman and Teryl Austin, will soon be declared ineligible by the school for signing contracts with Walters and Bloom. 81
6/17/1987
Walters Told Austin to Tear Up Contract
Austin told school officials that Walters stopped $250 per month payments and encouraged him to tear up his contract because the player’s value as an NFL prospect had dropped. 82
6/26/1987
Pearl and Big Ten Review Video, Clear Harmon
6/28/1987
Bloom Threatened to Kill Rival Agent
Former Auburn University running back Brent Fullwood said he testified before the grand jury that Bloom threatened to “bump off” his current agent, George Kickliter. 88
7/14/1987
OSU’s Carter Declared Ineligible
Ohio State wide receiver Chris Carter was declared ineligible for taking money from and signing a contract with Walters and Bloom. 89
7/15/1987
Bloom Tells Signing Technique
7/19/1987
NFL Linked to Walters
Lloyd Bloom disclosed that he and Norby Walters have purchased information – including phone numbers – on college athletes from NFL scouts. 91
7/28/1987
UT to Declare James Lott Ineligible
The University of Texas will declare three-time NCAA champion high jumper and football defensive back ineligible for his senior season for accepting money from Walters and Bloom. 92
7/29/1987
Bloom Banned by NFLPA
Lloyd Bloom became the first agent every permanently decertified by the NFLPA, meaning NFL teams would not be allowed to negotiate with the agent.
Bloom responded, “So what? The NFLPA has no jurisdiction over college seniors.” 93
8/16/1987
Austin Gets NCAA Amnesty
The NCAA announced a conditional “amnesty program” and reinstated Pitt defensive back Austin, who had cooperated with investigations of Walters and Bloom. 94
8/26/1987
Carter Sues Walters
Cris Carter filed a $4 million dollar lawsuit against Walters and Bloom for damages he sustained in losing his NCAA college eligibility.
The lawsuit includes allegations that “Walters suggested, by reference to Walter’s ability to have a recalcitrant player’s legs broken, that Cris would suffer physical harm if he did not adhere to the agreement.” 95
9/11/1987
Michael Franzese Interviewed by FBI About Walters
10/5/1987
Harmon Keeps $49,055 “Inducement” He Got From Walters
11/4/1987
Walters and Bloom Pay Athletes Over $800,000
11/15/1987
Carter Takes Plea Deal To Avoid Indictment
Former OSU receiver Chris Carter accepted a pre-trial diversion plan from the U.S. Attorney in Chicago “in order to avoid indictment” in the ongoing grand jury investigation of Walters and Bloom. 100
11/17/1987
Franzese Interviewed By FBI On Clements Beating
11/29/1987
Franzese Featured in LIFE Magazine
12/1/1987
Walters Lawsuit Tossed
A federal judge in New York dismissed a $500,000 lawsuit Walters and Bloom had filed against Brent Fullwood because, the judge ruled, “we decline to serve as the paymaster of the wages of crime, or referee between thieves.” 103
12/18/1987
Big Ten Expels Walters and Bloom
A federal judge signed a consent decree in which Walters and Bloom agreed never again to deal with a Big Ten athlete. 104
12/23/1987
Walters and Bloom Indicted in Alabama
Walters and Bloom were indicted by a Tuscaloosa County, AL grand jury on misdemeanor charges of tampering with a sports contest, commercial bribery, and deceptive trade practices for their dealings with McKey and his Alabama teammate, Terry Coner, during the 1986-87 basketball season. 105
3/2/1988
Valukas Squashes Harmon Investigation
3/15/1988
Athletes Agree to Reimburse Colleges to Avoid Indictment
At least 10 football and basketball players agreed to reimburse their universities for part of their scholarships to avoid federal prosecution for dealing with Walters and Bloom. 107
3/25/1988
Franzese Agrees to Testify Against Walters
4/5/1988
Bloom Pleads Guilty, Flips on Walters in Alabama
5/2/1988
Big Ten Commissioner Duke Relates 1986 Rose Bowl Game® Post-Game Iowa Locker Room Altercation to FBI
In an interview with the FBI, Big Ten Commissioner Wayne Duke related,
“[If it] hadn’t been for [Ronnie Harmon], Iowa would have beat UCLA.
…his teammates were upset about it.
There was an altercation in the locker room between the players.” 110
5/15/1988
Walters Takes Plea Deal In Alabama
Walters agreed to a $203,500 settlement with the University of Alabama for his dealings with McKey and Coner.
He also signed a consent decree agreeing that he would never again deal with a college-eligible athlete from the SEC. 111
6/1/1988
Fullwood, Harmon, and Palmer Take Plea Deal To Avoid Indictment
6/21/1988
Walters and Bloom Indicted
8/24/1988
FBI: Mob Gambling Annual Income $26-30 Billion (worth $67-77 billion today)
8/28/1988
Franzese Transferred to Minimum Security Prison
Franzese, serving a 10-year sentence on racketeering and embezzlement charges, was transferred to a minimum security federal camp in Boron, CA from a medium security prison due to a “writ to testify” in the Walters and Bloom trial in the Northern District of Illinois U.S. District Court. 115
8/31/1988
Walters Banned From Atlantic City Casinos
The New Jersey Casino Control Commissioner banned Walters from doing business with his music acts at Atlantic City casinos as long as he remains under federal indictment. 116
11/17/1988
Ronnie Harmon Drops Two Passes in AFC Championship Loss
In the AFC championship game, Ronnie Harmon dropped two passes, including one for a key late-fourth-quarter, red-zone first down that would have prevented a subsequent end-zone interception. Harmon’s Buffalo Bills team went on to lose 21-10 to the Cincinnati Bengals. 117
The Bengals covered the spread. 118
1/8/1989
FBI Interviews Franzese About Murders
2/22/1989
Walters Sells Entertainment Agency
Norby Walters sold his once-lucrative entertainment agent business to his former partner Jerry Ade. 120
2/24/1989
Jury Selection Begins in Walters and Bloom Trial
Jury selection got underway in a U.S. District Court in Chicago. Presiding federal judge George Marovich warned defense attorneys, “This is a criminal trial. We’re not going to have a morality play (about college athletics).” 121
3/1/1989
Franzese to Testify Against Walters
The U.S. Government revealed that mafia crime boss Michael Franzese would testify that he was a silent partner with Walters in the sports agency business.
Franzese will testify that his role was to help Walters “obtain and retain” clients by “exploiting (his) considerable reputation as a member of organized crime.” 122
3/3/1989
Harmon Says He Never Fit In at Iowa
Speaking with assistant U.S. attorney Howard Pearl and FBI special agent George Randolph, Ronnie Harmon stated that as a black kid from the streets of New York, he never believed that he fit in at Iowa.
He also related that his Iowa career had ended bitterly when his teammates, led by quarterback Chuck Long, pointed fingers at his indifferent attitude after losing four fumbles and dropping a touchdown pass in the 1986 Rose Bowl Game®. 123
3/5/1989
Walters and Bloom Trial Opens
Though Walters and Bloom dealt with 57 athletes from 32 universities, just seven schools involving 10 athletes are named in the indictment as victims of the mail and wire fraud.
In addition, the government will try and prove Walters and Bloom used Franzese’s reputation as a mob boss to threaten at least four players who reneged on contractual agreements. 124
3/6/1989
Harmon Received Over $54,000 From Walters
3/7/1989
Harmon Testifies He Lied to NCAA, Big Ten, and Iowa
3/8/1989
Judge’s Comment on Ronnie Harmon: Not a Victim
Session in Judge’s chambers, no jury present.
Presiding Federal Judge George Marovich:
“[Ronnie] Harmon, nobody is putting up as the victim.
They are unindicted or deferred, or whatever, co-conspirators.
l don’t suppose anybody has lost sight of that…” 128
3/8/1989
Devon Mitchell Took $2,000 Cash From Walters
3/8/1989
Perryman Testifies of Bloom Threat
Former Michigan running back Robert Perryman testified sports agent Lloyd Bloom threatened that unless Perryman dropped contract demands, Bloom would cause the Big Ten to invalidate Michigan’s prior year conference championship. 130
3/9/1989
Notre Dame’s Banks and Miller Took Walters Cash
3/13/1989
Michael Franzese Testifies Against Walters
3/14/1989
Maurice Douglass Testifies Bloom Threatened to Break His Legs
Former Kentucky football player Maurice Douglass testified that sports agent Lloyd Bloom told him that if didn’t meet Bloom’s demands, “he’d have somebody break my legs.” 133
3/15/1989
Rivers Took $2,500 Cash From Walters
3/15/1989
Ingram Took $7,500 Cash From Walters to Sign Contract
3/16/1989
Woods Testifies Walters and Bloom Threatened His Younger Brother
3/21/1989
Simmons Took $4,000 From Walters; Bloom Threatened Gay
3/21/1989
Palmer Took $4,000 From Walters; Bloom Stole $125,000 From Palmer
3/22/1989
Iowa’s Becker: Walters’ “Loans” are Compensation
3/27/1989
“New Edition” Manager Testifies of Walters Extortion Via Franzese Threats
4/3/1989
Walters and Bloom Guilty
4/13/1989
Pearl Resigns, Joins Webb
5/15/1989
Michael Franzese Agrees to Testify Against the Mob, Released From Prison
5/18/1989
Harmon Stops Talking to the Press
Ronnie Harmon stops talking to the press and does no interviews for the next eight years. 145
6/15/1989
Valukas Announces Resignation
U.S. Attorney Anton “Tony” Valukas, who led the prosecution of Walters and Bloom, announced he was resigning and returning to private practice. 146
11/13/1989
Bill’s Harmon Drops Last-Second, Game-Winning Touchdown Pass in Playoffs
1/6/1990
Harmon Dropped by Bills
2/1/1990
Walters and Bloom Verdict Reversed
9/17/1990
Walters Moves to Los Angeles
10/15/1990
Athletes Don’t Repay Scholarships
11/10/1990
“Playing for Keeps” Book Released
Written by Chris Mortensen, it becomes the definitive work on the investigation, trial, and conviction of Norby Walters and Lloyd Bloom. 158
1/1/1991
Bloom Pleads Guilty, Gets Probation in Plea Deal
Bloom pleaded guilty to a charge of mail fraud and received five years probation and 500 hours of community service. 159
8/27/1992
Walters Pleads Guilty, Gets 1 1/2 Years in Plea Deal
Walters pleaded guilty to two counts of mail fraud and received 1 1/2 years in prison, a $25,000 fine, and 250 hours of community service. 160
9/18/1992
Appeals Court Tosses Walters Guilty Plea
6/30/1993
Bloom Murdered in Mob Execution Style Shooting
8/27/1993
FBI Interviews Salvatore Miciotta About Franzese Involvement in Murders
9/30/1993
Walters On Need for Fundraising License: Fuhgeddaboudit
Regarding the need for a commercial fundraising license, Walters exclaimed, “Fuhgeddaboudit. They’ll never know. Just make sure you cover you’re ass. As long as the charities are happy, you’ll be fine.” 164
9/15/1995
Walters Involved With LA Fundraising Events
10/16/1995
Chargers Release Harmon
The San Diego Chargers released Ronnie Harmon and he became an unrestricted free agent who could sign with any team by July 15, 1996. 166
Chargers quarterback Stan Humphries stated, “We’ve got to have players who want to be here, not just guys who are coming in and picking up a paycheck.” 167
2/18/1996
Harmon Finishes Career with the Chicago Bears
12/12/1997
Harmon on the 1986 Rose Bowl Game®: “I didn’t think it was that big of a deal.”
12/12/1997
Marovich Assumes Senior Status
U.S. Federal Judge George Marovich, who presided over the Walters and Bloom trial, assumed Senior Status (semi-retirement) with a 25% case load. 171
1/2/2000
Ex-Iowa Coach McCarney on Harmon: “It was so uncharacteristic of him”
7/23/2002
Franzese: Harmon Threw the 1986 Rose Bowl Game®
7/23/2002
U.S. House Holds Hearings on the Sports Agent Responsibility and Trust Act
2/3/2003
Walters Lacks Permit For Fundraising
1/26/2004
Franzese Admits Fixing Games
2/15/2006
Chuck Long on the 1986 Rose Bowl Game®: “That was [Hayden Fry’s] best chance to win it.”
10/25/2015
Walters Cancels Long-Running B- and C-List Oscar Party
12/15/2017
Kathy Clements Named to the AD100 2023
11/29/2022
Dates are specific where possible and provided by source material.
Some dates are estimated based on ambiguous reports or references. If estimated, the date is typically the 15th of the month, e.g. 6/15/1952.
Footnotes
- Sports Illustrated 8/3/1987 ↩︎
- Variety 2/19/2009 ↩︎
- “Playing For Keeps” p163 ↩︎
- Sports Illustrated 8/3/1987 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Franzese direct, p1128 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Franzese direct, p1146 ↩︎
- “I’ll Make You An Offer That You Can’t Refuse” p67 ↩︎
- New York State Liquor Authority Hearing p31 ↩︎
- Sports Illustrated 8/3/1987 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Franzese direct, p1126 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Franzese direct, p1151 ↩︎
- “Blood Covenant” p124 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Franzese direct, p1148 ↩︎
- “Blood Covenant” p162 ↩︎
- New York Times 11/22/1981 ↩︎
- Newsday 12/6/1981 ↩︎
- Newsday 12/6/1981 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Harmon cross, p210 ↩︎
- “Blood Covenant” p178 ↩︎
- Los Angeles Times 7/19/1987 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Franzese redirect, p1277 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Franzese direct, p1169 ↩︎
- “Playing For Keeps” p148 ↩︎
- The Kingston Whig Standard 11/16/2009 ↩︎
- “Playing For Keeps” p149 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Franzese direct, p1169 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Franzese direct, p1170 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 3/8/1989 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 3/8/1989 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p68 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p68 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p68 ↩︎
- Los Angeles Times 7/19/1987 ↩︎
- Wikipedia ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p30 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p68 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p68 ↩︎
- “Blood Covenant” p255 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p68 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p149 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Franzese direct, p1173 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Harmon direct, p168 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Harmon direct, p173 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p68 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p68 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p68 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Franzese direct, p1184 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p68 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p68 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p68 ↩︎
- Newsday 12/19/1985 ↩︎
- Newsday 12/21/1985 ↩︎
- Los Angeles Times 12/30/1985 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps p69 ↩︎
- Des Moines Register 1/2/1986 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 3/5/1989 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 2/1/1998 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Harmon cross, p237 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Mims direct, p351 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Mims cross, p395 ↩︎
- Newsday 3/22/1986 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Harmon cross, p295 ↩︎
- “Playing For Keeps” p134 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Harmon cross, p203 ↩︎
- “Playing For Keeps” p136 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Franzese cross, p1225 ↩︎
- Sports Illustrated 8/3/1987 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p228 ↩︎
- “Playing For Keeps” p163 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 3/12/1987 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 3/5/1989 ↩︎
- “Playing For Keeps” p10 ↩︎
- “Playing For Keeps” p69 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 3/27/1987 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 3/27/1987 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 3/5/1989 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 5/19/1987 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 5/20/1987 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 3/5/1989 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 6/10/1987 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 3/5/1989 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 3/5/1989 ↩︎
- Des Moines Register 6/28/1987 ↩︎
- 1972 Brown University Football Media Guide ↩︎
- 1973 Brown University Football Media Guide ↩︎
- 1974 Brown University Football Media Guide ↩︎
- 1975 Brown University Football Media Guide ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 7/15/1987 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 7/16/1987 ↩︎
- Los Angeles Times 7/19/1987 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 7/28/1987 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 3/5/1989 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 8/16/1987 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 3/5/1989 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 9/11/1987 ↩︎
- “Playing For Keeps” p135 ↩︎
- Case 11059-014 Walters v Harmon ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 11/4/1987 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p152 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 3/5/1989 ↩︎
- “Playing For Keeps” p149 ↩︎
- LIFE magazine 12/01/1997 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 12/19/1987 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 12/23/1987 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 3/3/1988 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p240 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 3/5/1989 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Franzese direct, p1141 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 5/3/1988 ↩︎
- “Playing For Keeps” p90 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 6/1/1988 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 6/21/1988 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 8/25/1988 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 8/28/1988 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 8/31/1988 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 3/5/1989 ↩︎
- The Buffalo News 1/9/1989 ↩︎
- Ronnie Harmon Fumble Rate ↩︎
- FBI Interview Report 2/22/1989 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 2/24/1989 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 3/1/1989 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 3/4/1989 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p240 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 3/7/1989 ↩︎
- Chicago Sun Times 3/8/1989 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Harmon direct, p156 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Harmon direct, p304 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; p410 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 3/9/1989 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 3/10/1989 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 3/14/1989 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 3/15/1989 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 3/16/1989 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 3/16/1989 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 3/17/1989 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 3/22/1989 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 3/22/1989 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 3/23/1989 ↩︎
- Case 88-CR-00709 transcript; Becker redirect, p2284 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 4/4/1989 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 4/14/1989 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p332 ↩︎
- Vanity Fair 4/5/2012 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 9/8/1989 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 12/12/1987 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 11/14/1989 ↩︎
- Sports Illustrated 1/15/1990 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 2/1/1998 ↩︎
- Ronnie Harmon Fumble Rate ↩︎
- UPI 2/2/1990 ↩︎
- Atlanta Constitution 9/18/1990 ↩︎
- Block and Tackle 2018-02-08 ↩︎
- New York Times 2/24/2016 ↩︎
- Jewish Journal 2/24/2017 ↩︎
- New York Times 2/24/2016 ↩︎
- Pro Sports Group 2011 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 11/10/1990 ↩︎
- “Playing for Keeps” p4 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 8/28/1992 ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 9/18/1992 ↩︎
- Chicago Sun Times 7/1/1993 ↩︎
- Los Angeles Times 8/28/1993 ↩︎
- FBI Interview Report 9/30/1993 ↩︎
- “King of Cons” p117 ↩︎
- “King of Cons” p97 ↩︎
- Newsday 2/18/1996 ↩︎
- Newsday 9/1/1996 ↩︎
- hawkfanatic 4/21/2020 ↩︎
- About Melissa Isaacson ↩︎
- Chicago Tribune 12/12/1997 ↩︎
- Wikipedia ↩︎
- CBS Sports 247Sports 7/24/2002 ↩︎
- CBS Sports 247Sports 7/24/2002 ↩︎
- U.S. House Hearing, 108 Congress H.R. 361 ↩︎
- Los Angeles Times 1/26/2004 ↩︎
- “The Fix Is In” p77 ↩︎
- The Cedar Rapids Gazette 10/25/2015 ↩︎
- Block and Tackle 2018-02-08 ↩︎
- Architectural Digest 11/29/2022 ↩︎