Nine suspended Florida Gators learned the next step of their legal fate on Monday, as sworn complaints against them were filed with the Alachua County Clerk of Courts.

Those nine Gators could face dozens of felony charges for a variety of alleged credit card frauds — though freshman offensive lineman Kadeem Telfort’s potential 30 charges and freshman defensive end Jordan Smith’s at least 17 charges would account for the lion’s share of that maxed-out number. And they are now more likely than ever to remain suspended for at least the forseeable future, thanks to University of Florida policy banning students facing felony charges from participating in student activities — like, say, football.

But what those players are actually accused of having done — which had been murky for more than a month, with various reports suggesting differing degrees and means of fraud perpetrated against the university or its bookstore or others — is now a matter of public record, as those sworn complaints have been filed.

Below, in 10 PDFs hosted at Scribd and available for download, you can read those complaints, taken from the Alachua County Clerk of Courts website on September 25. They have been only lightly redacted, and include identifying details of both the Florida players and of alleged victims of the frauds, so I strongly encourage you not to focus on those details, but instead the narrative reports that explain what the players in question are alleged to have done.

I haven’t read all of these reports in full, but will over the next few hours — and will add some thoughts in the comments or a separate post when I do.

Scribd | PDF

Scribd | PDF

Scribd | PDF

James Houston

Scribd | PDF

Scribd | PDF

Scribd | PDF

Scribd | PDF

Kadeem Telfort

Scribd (No. 1) | PDF (No. 1)

Scribd (No. 2) | PDF (No. 2)

Scribd | PDF

Notes

Individuals who are not alleged to have committed crimes are represented by initials.