The FBI’s investigation into college basketball corruption has already turned up several big names, including assistant coaches at prominent programs and apparel company representatives. The charges brought by federal prosecutors on Tuesday revolve around alleged bribery and fraud schemes.

Here are the most important names and entities to know after the initial wave of charges and complaints. This will be updated as we learn more.

The investigators

The FBI: The actual government entity that, unlike the NCAA, is capable of complete and detailed investigations, using subpoenas and all. During a Sept. 26 briefing, FBI assistant director Bill Sweeney and acting U.S. attorney Joon H. Kim said the investigation continues, meaning more names will join this list.

The actual government entity that, unlike the NCAA, is capable of complete and detailed investigations, using subpoenas and all. During a Sept. 26 briefing, FBI assistant director Bill Sweeney and acting U.S. attorney Joon H. Kim said the investigation continues, meaning more names will join this list. The NCAA: The college sports self-governing body was as surprised to learn about all this as you were, but it’s safe to say NCAA sanctions will eventually follow in the FBI’s wake.

College basketball coaches

"We got lucky on this one," Pitino told Terry Meiners of News Radio 840. "I had an AAU director call me and ask me if I'd be interested in a player (Bowen). I saw him against another great player from Indiana. I said 'Yeah, I'd be really interested.' They had to come in unofficially, pay for their hotel, pay for their meals. We spent zero dollars recruiting a five-star athlete who I loved when I saw him play. In my 40 years of coaching this is the luckiest I've been."

The Miami Hurricanes, aka “University-7:” The school is alleged to have had an assistant coach work with Adidas executive James Gatto to arrange a payment of $150,000 to a potential 2018 recruit. Gatto and the coach were reportedly worried the recruit would take another bribe for approximately just as much from a rival school and rival apparel company.

Apparel and agents

Adidas, aka “Company-1:” Employees and affiliates of the sportswear brand have been charged. Adidas’ formal ties to college basketball include the programs it sponsors as well as AAU teams featuring elite recruits on its travel circuit. A company representative allegedly agreed to make two payments totaling $250,000 to recruits to attend schools they sponsor.

The following individuals have all been charged: