Report: Alleged marijuana dealer supplied KU players

A Kansas man at the center of a large-scale marijuana case allegedly supplied the drug to multiple players from the 2010-11 Kansas men's basketball team, a federal prosecutor said.

The Kansas City Star reported Friday an assistant U.S. attorney made the claim during a June 18 detention hearing for Samuel Villeareal III.

The 32-year-old from Overland Park was among numerous defendants charged June 11 with a scheme to distribute more than 2,000 pounds of marijuana in Johnson and Douglas counties. His attorney, Jonathan A. Bortnick, said he had no comment.

A court transcript obtained by the Star shows the prosecutor, Terra Moorhead, claimed during the hearing Villeareal supplied pot to multiple members of the Jayhawks' squad.

Jim Cross, spokesman for the U.S. attorney's office, said in an e-mail to the AP he could confirm the federal prosecutor stated during a hearing "the defendant sold marijuana to members of the KU basketball team from the 2010 and 2011 season." Cross said he couldn't provide additional information and Moorhead would be unavailable for comment.

The AP's attempts to reach Kansas coach Bill Self and associate athletic director Jim Marchioney were unsuccessful. Two players from the team contacted by the Star said they'd never heard of Villeareal, while two others refused to comment.

Morehead told a federal magistrate that prosecutors know who Villeareal was selling to because of text messages obtained from an iPhone seized from his home and from surveillance that was done throughout this investigation, the Star reported.

Morehead said the phone "became kind of a key component to this entire investigation."

She also described what agents watching Villeareal observed.

"At one occasion law enforcement had Mr. Villeareal this basketball season at the Sprint Center sitting behind the KU basketball bench with a number of the players," she said. "So we know that he had probably not only a personal relationship with them but a professional relationship as well."

The 44-page complaint and supporting affidavit contain no information about Villeareal's alleged connection to basketball players. Instead, the documents outline the extensive investigation that began in 2008 and included the use of court-approved interceptions of cell phone conversations between the alleged conspirators.

The detention hearing concluded with Judge James O'Hara ruling that Villeareal could be released on bond but would have to reside at a halfway house until trial. Villeareal also was ordered to have no contact with any witnesses or co-defendants, including any of his alleged marijuana customers.

Morehead said: "He obviously knows who those are, and so do we because we have a cell phone and have all of that documentation. And again, we will be monitoring that."

The University of Kansas' internal drug-testing policy requires all freshman or new transfer student athletes to take a drug test "within a reasonable amount of time" after arriving on campus. All teams that qualify for post-season play also may be subject to testing.

The university also conducts unannounced, random testing during the year, according to the policy. Athletes who test positive are required to undergo counseling and are subjected to more frequent testing. The policy does not call for suspension from game competition until after a third positive test.