For Shilo Sanders, the off-field legal battle tied to a multimillion-dollar judgment is far from over.
A federal bankruptcy judge recently denied a motion filed by the former Colorado football safety and former undrafted free agent for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in his ongoing bankruptcy case, allowing a trustee’s complaint against him to continue moving forward.
The ruling marks another setback for Sanders as he attempts to navigate the financial and legal fallout stemming from a lawsuit that dates back nearly a decade.
Sanders, the son of Deion Sanders, filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in 2023 as he sought relief from a massive civil judgment tied to a 2015 incident at his Dallas-area high school.
In that case, former school security guard John Darjean alleged that Sanders assaulted him while he attempted to confiscate the student’s phone, resulting in serious and lasting injuries.
A Texas court later awarded Darjean approximately $11.89 million in damages after Sanders failed to appear at the civil trial.
The bankruptcy filing opened a new legal front, with creditors and court-appointed officials examining Sanders‘ financial activity and whether certain assets or income streams should be used to satisfy the debt.
In the latest development, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Michael Romero rejected Sanders‘ request to dismiss claims brought by the trustee overseeing his bankruptcy estate. The trustee, David Wadsworth, is responsible for identifying and collecting assets that could potentially be distributed to creditors.
Romero‘s ruling emphasized that the court was not yet evaluating the truth of the allegations themselves, but only whether the complaint contained enough factual detail to proceed.
“The Court’s role in deciding the Motion to Dismiss is not to resolve factual disputes or weigh potential evidence outside the four corners of the Complaint,” Romero wrote in the ruling.
“The Trustee has otherwise sufficiently pled the necessary elements of his claims. He has also supported his claims with sufficient factual allegations regarding Sanders‘ bank accounts, his NIL proceeds deposits into the Big 21 Account, and Sanders‘ control over Big 21 and Headache Gang.
“Whether the evidence will ultimately substantiate the Trustee’s claims is a matter to be decided at trial.”
The decision means that the dispute over Sanders‘ finances will continue, potentially leading to a trial where both sides present evidence regarding his income and assets.
Legal fight centers on finances and NIL earnings
At the center of the dispute is how Sanders‘ income, particularly money tied to name, image, and likeness opportunities, should be treated under bankruptcy law.
The trustee argues that some of the funds connected to Sanders‘ NIL deals and related business entities may belong to the bankruptcy estate and therefore could be used to repay creditors.
Sanders‘ legal team has countered that the money in question represents earnings that came after the bankruptcy filing and should remain his property.
Resolving that issue will require the court to examine details about when the income was generated, what services Sanders performed, and how the payments were structured.
As Romero noted in his ruling, sorting through those questions will likely require a full evidentiary process rather than a quick pretrial dismissal.
For Sanders, the case continues to cast a long shadow over his football career. A former defensive back for the Colorado Buffaloes, he has spent much of the past few years balancing his role in one of college football’s most high-profile programs with a complicated legal process that could influence his financial future.
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