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Aspiration co-founder sentenced to 14 years in prison after wire fraud amid NBA investigation, Clippers scandal

Aspiration co-founder Joseph Sanberg was sentenced to 14 years in federal prison on Monday after he pleaded guilty to two counts of wire fraud, according to ESPN’s Baxter Holmes . Sanberg was behind the now-defunct green banking company that is the focus of the NBA’s investigati

Aspiration co-founder sentenced to 14 years in prison after wire fraud amid NBA investigation, Clippers scandal
Yahoo Sports — 1 June 2026
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Aspiration co-founder Joseph Sanberg was sentenced to 14 years in federal prison on Monday after he pleaded guilty to two counts of wire fraud, according to ESPN’s Baxter Holmes .

Sanberg was behind the now-defunct green banking company that is the focus of the NBA’s investigation into the Los Angeles Clippers and their deals with star Kawhi Leonard, something that journalist Pablo Torre first reported on and later won a Pulitzer Prize for .

Prosecutors said that Sanberg defrauded investors and lenders out of $248 million by obtaining loans, falsifying bank statements and more. They were seeking a prison sentence of nearly 18 years, though Sanberg’s attorney argued that he displayed “no malice, no ill will and no greed” while arguing that he should avoid prison time all together.

But Judge Stephen V. Wilson said that Sanberg’s actions were “among the worst I’ve ever seen” on the bench, and that the case had “touched almost every badge of fraud,” according to ESPN. So he sentenced Sanberg to 14 years.

“I accept that I lost my moral compass and wrongly stepped over the line, and I’m very sorry,” Sanberg said in court. “I broke the law … I'm sorry. I’m so sorry.”

Aspiration was founded in 2013 as an environmentally conscious digital bank. While several notable celebrities and companies partnered with the company over the years, Aspiration signed a $300 million endorsement deal with the Clippers in 2021 and a $28 million deal with Leonard the following year.

In September, Torre accused Ballmer and the Clippers of using Aspiration as a way to circumvent the NBA’s salary cap and pay Leonard more money to sign with the team in free agency. The deal with Leonard was essentially a no-show marketing deal.

Ballmer, who said he invested $60 million of his own money into the company, repeatedly continued to donate to Aspiration even after the government started investigating the company for fraud, according to Torre’s reporting, and he initially called Torre’s reporting “gossip.”

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