Former Indiana Pacers point guard Jamaal Tinsley has filed a lawsuit accusing his former agent and attorney, financial managers and housekeeper of taking more money than they were due.

The civil suit, filed earlier this week in Indianapolis, names agent and attorney Raymond Brothers, Chase financial managers William Kennedy and Erika Blume, housekeeper Jennifer Burr and 10 John Does. The suit does not specify the amount of damages Tinsley is seeking.

Tinsley paid Brothers and I AM Sports and Entertainment Inc. $1.4 million between January 2006 and August 2011 according to the suit, which claims the amount exceeded the 4 percent payments they were entitled to through the NBA's Collective Bargaining Agreement. The fees included $41,000 for "car loan repayment," $22,000 for "loan repayment to Jamaal Tinsley" and cellphone bills of nearly $7,000. The suit claims Tinsley's financial managers charged unnecessary fees and arranged second and third mortgages on his homes at an excessive interest rate, and that Burr and her company, Elite Services, were overpaid. According to the suit, Burr was paid more than $280,000 for work at a home Tinsley no longer owned.

Tinsley played seven season in Indianapolis, with the team eventually buying out the final two seasons of his contract for $10.7 million, saving the Pacers $4 million. According to the suit, the buyout is not considered salary by the NBA's Collective Bargaining Agreement — it's considered damages for breach of contract — and therefore not subject to agent fees, though Brothers received $450,000 from it.

A call to I AM Sports & Entertainment was not immediately returned. Chase Bank, Burr and Elite Services could not be reached for comment.

Tinsley was paid approximately $40 million during his NBA career according to basketball-reference.com.

Tinsley did not play in the NBA in 2008-09, returned to play for Memphis in 2009-10 then played three more seasons with Utah from 2011-12 and 2013-14.