Federal prosecutors have filed additional counts against former Adidas executive Jim Gatto in the ongoing college basketball fraud scandal, including payments to the families and guardian of current and former players at Kansas and North Carolina State.

No players nor their families are named specifically. The indictment, filed by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, also doesn’t name any college coaches. The new information “expands the scope of the charged wire fraud conspiracy,” according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office of the Southern District of New York. It’s the most significant development in the case since 10 men were arrested by the FBI on Sept. 26.

The Kansas part of the indictment charges that Gatto and a coach of an Adidas-sponsored AAU team allegedly gave “approximately at least $90,000 to the mother of a top high school basketball player. The payments were made in connection with a commitment by the student athlete to attend the University of Kansas.”

Adidas has an endorsement deal with Kansas. The payouts include a “$30,000 payment” during a meeting with the AAU coach and the parent in a hotel room in New York and another $20,000 payment in a hotel room in Las Vegas.

View photos Federal charges allege mother of top recruit received $90,000 for son to commit to play at Kansas. More

The large lump payments were sent from Adidas to the AAU coach, to then be given to the player’s parent, under headings such as “Tournament Activation/Fee,” allegedly to conceal the purpose of the money. The federal documents refer to them as “sham invoices.”

A guardian of a different Kansas recruit told Adidas they had received illicit payments in return for a commitment to steer the athlete to a university sponsored by a rival athletic apparel company. The guardian said the player favored Kansas and needed “another $20,000 payment” to “help get the student-athlete ‘out from under’ the deal.”

The indictment then alleged the player made a surprise commitment to Kansas on Aug. 30, 2017. News accounts on that date show Silvio De Sousa, a native of Angola who attended IMG Academy in Florida, committed to Kansas. De Sousa played for the Jayhawks this season as part of their Final Four team, which could place their NCAA tournament run in jeopardy of being vacated if the allegations are proven.

De Sousa, who reclassified from the high school class of 2018 to 2017, was cleared to play by the NCAA this past season on Jan. 13, 2018 – midway through the season. Less than three months after the NCAA certified his academic and amateur status, he was implicated in a federal indictment alleging that his guardian received money in exchange for De Sousa playing for the Jayhawks.

The wording of the federal document raises another potential issue related to Kansas: The complaint states that payments from Adidas to the mother of a Jayhawks player were ongoing “into at least in or around November 2017.” The initial federal complaint was made public in late September 2017, indicating that the family of a Kansas player was allegedly still receiving money after the U.S. attorney’s allegations rocked college basketball.

The indictment does not say anyone at Kansas was aware of the payments to the players.

“Earlier today, we learned that the University of Kansas is named as a victim in a federal indictment,” Joe Monaco, Kansas’ director of strategic communications said in a statement. “The indictment does not suggest any wrongdoing by the university, its coaches or its staff. We will cooperate fully with investigators in this matter. Because this is an active investigation, it is not appropriate for us to comment further at this time.”

The documents also officially pull North Carolina State into the investigation. The feds charge that Gatto was involved in a scheme to pay a former North Carolina State player – star recruit Dennis Smith Jr., according to the timeline of events in the complaint – $40,000 in the fall of 2015 to sign with the Wolfpack. Smith had played for an Adidas-backed AAU program, and NC State is an Adidas-backed athletic program.

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