Tone Deafness Alert! Biden Schedules Emergency Glitzy Celeb Fundraiser
No One Is Safe in the Big Apple: Actor Steve Buscemi Assaulted in...
Pro-Hamas Protest BACKFIRE: DEI Axed for More Police Funding in 'Huge Win for...
Kris Guido Seeks to Bring Service from the Frontline to the El Paso...
New UN Estimate Halves the Death Toll of Women and Children in Gaza
Seinfeld vs Woke Students, Pelosi vs a Brit, Stormy Daniels Caught Lying?
DNC's Effort to Shore Up Biden's Labor Union Cred Collides With Reality
Say Their Names: These Are the Americans Held Hostage in Gaza, Forgotten by...
Oh, God, Honey NO! Amtrak Tries Posting for Mother's Day and It's Hilariously...
Tragedy Averted: Catholic Parishioners Stop Armed Teen at Louisiana Mass
High School Students Expelled for ‘Blackface’ Just Received a Hefty Settlement
CUE the Mouth-Breather Melting DOWN --> Trump TROUNCING Biden in Latest Swing State...
Carol Roth's Post Listing What Government Is Actually Doing Well Is a Thing...
Kamala Harris' Take on Supporting the 2nd Amendment PAINFUL Reminder That Joe Sucks...
Sen. Fetterman Rips Media for Spin on Seinfeld's Duke Commencement (Here are Some...

Los Angeles Lakers return around $4.6 million they received in coronavirus bailout money

A lot of big businesses, like Shake Shack and Ruth’s Chris Steak House, that received millions from coronavirus relief legislation have given it back. Harvard University faced similar backlash when it was found the school, which is sitting on a $40 billion endowment, took $9 million in relief from the CARES Act — President Trump even called out Harvard by name during a press briefing to let both the school and the public know they’d be paying the money back.

Advertisement

Now another “small business,” the Los Angeles Lakers, has told ESPN it would be returning around $4.6 million.

We imagine ticket takers and concession workers might need paycheck protection, but not LeBron James.

ESPN reports:

The Lakers, one of the NBA’s most profitable franchises, applied for relief through the Small Business Administration’s Paycheck Protection Program, and were among the companies and nonprofits granted loans during the first round of distributions. But after reports that several large or highly capitalized entities were securing aid from the program’s initial $349 billion pool — while hundreds of thousands of smaller businesses were shut out — the Lakers said they returned the money.

Hey, they qualified under the legislation as written.

But once they heard that the money had run out before small businesses that needed it actually got a share, they decided to return it. At least, that’s their story.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Let’s see if any other NBA teams step up to admit they took millions from the program.


Related:

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement