Impostor athlete at Texas high school gets prison term - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 09:35 AM | Calgary | -16.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
World

Impostor athlete at Texas high school gets prison term

A former star athlete who posed as a teenager to play high school basketball in West Texas has been sentenced to three years in prison after reaching a plea deal, a prosecutor said.

Adult basketball player enrols at school behind Friday Night Lights

A former star athlete who posed as a teenager to play high school basketball in West Texas was sentenced Wednesday to three years in prison after reaching a plea deal, a prosecutor said.

Guerdwich Montimere, who posed as a Permian High School sophomore in 2010, leaves the Ector County Courthouse in Odessa, Texas, on Wednesday. ((Heather Leiphart/Odessa American/Associated Press))

Guerdwich Montimere, 23, pleaded guilty to two counts of sexual assault and three counts of tampering with government records, said Ector County District Attorney Bobby Bland.

Officials say the naturalized U.S. citizen from Haiti had graduated from high school in Florida, where he also played basketball, years before he moved to Odessa and presented himself as a ninth-grader named Jerry Joseph.

Montimere was 21 and 22 when he played one season at Odessa Permian High, the same rabidly competitive school that inspired the book and movie Friday Night Lights about high school football.

Montimere helped lead the Panthers to the 2010 state playoffs, but the team had to forfeit after his story unravelled.

Montimere was indicted last year on six felony charges, including sexual assault and tampering with government records. His trial was to begin next week in Odessa, and he had faced up to 20 years in prison if convicted on the original counts.

The indictment accused him of identity theft. The sexual assault counts accused him of having sex with a 15-year-old girl.

"Sometimes your best defence is to take the road with the least amount of risk. He could have gotten 20 years," Montimere's attorney, Dusty Gallivan, said.

Player lived with coach

Suspicions were raised about Joseph after coaches from Florida at a post-season amateur basketball tournament in Arkansas said they recognized him as Montimere, a 2007 graduate of a Fort Lauderdale, Fla., high school.

Because he was living with Odessa basketball coach Danny Wright and not a parent or guardian, Montimere had to apply to the University Interscholastic League in Austin to play high school basketball. A waiver was granted and he was the star of the team.

Wright, who still calls Montimere by the name Jerry, said he was livid once he learned Joseph wasn't who he said he was.

"I was blindsided," Wright said. "I never saw it coming. I just thought he was a big kid." Montimere was named the District 2-5A Newcomer of the Year, an honour that was stripped when his deception was exposed. The Panthers also forfeited their 16 wins, although Wright said the "team would have been good with or without Jerry."

Bland noted Montimere will have to register as a sex offender. Gallivan said that was "one of the biggest obstacles to overcome" when it came to reaching a deal, but that Bland wouldn't budge on the issue.