Division of Criminal Justice
Stephen J. Taylor,
DirectorFor Immediate Release: September 17, 2012
TRAINER PLEADS GUILTY TO SUBMITTING FORGED MEDICAL FORMS
TO STATE ATHLETIC CONTROL BOARD TO CLEAR FIGHTERS FOR MIXED MARTIAL ARTS
TRENTON –
Attorney General Jeffrey S. Chiesa announced that a man who trains fighters for
Amateur Mixed Martial Arts contests in New Jersey pleaded guilty today to submitting false documents, including medical forms, to the State Athletic Control Board so that his athletes could fight without undergoing mandatory physical examinations and medical tests.
Amateur Mixed Martial Arts contests in New Jersey pleaded guilty today to submitting false documents, including medical forms, to the State Athletic Control Board so that his athletes could fight without undergoing mandatory physical examinations and medical tests.
Philip Dunlap,
49, of Mahwah, a trainer who owns and operates a gym called Advanced Fighting
Systems, pleaded guilty before Superior Court Judge Patrick J. Roma in
Bergen County to tampering
with public records or information, a third-degree offense. Under the plea
agreement, the state will recommend that Dunlap be sentenced to a term of
probation. He must perform 200 hours of community service and pay
a $5,000 fine. There is a presumption against any custodial
sentence for a third-degree crime in New Jersey if a
defendant has no prior criminal record. Dunlap has no prior
record. Deputy Attorney General Debra A. Conrad took the guilty plea for the
Division of Criminal Justice Specialized Crimes Bureau. Dunlap is
scheduled to be sentenced on Oct. 26.
In pleading
guilty, Dunlap admitted that, from 2007
through 2011, he submitted false or forged documents, including medical forms
and consent to fight forms, to the State Athletic Control Board (SACB), which
regulates Amateur Mixed
Martial Arts (AMMA). The medical forms certified that a doctor had
examined certain fighters whom Dunlap trained and that they were medically
cleared to participate in AMMA contests. The consent to fight forms certified
that the fighters signed the form. An investigation by the SACB
and the Division of Criminal Justice revealed that the fighters did not receive
the physicals, the doctor did not sign the medical forms, and the fighters did
not sign the consent forms. After the SACB discovered the fraud,
it suspended the fighters from any AMMA fights in New Jersey and
referred the matter to the Division of Criminal Justice.
“The State Athletic
Control Board’s main concern will always be the health and safety of the
combative sport competitor, and the integrity of the contest,” said SACB
Commissioner Aaron Davis. “We are committed to working jointly
with the Division of Criminal Justice in stopping the fraudulent submission of
medical forms to the State of New
Jersey. Every trainer
investigated and arrested for this type of crime enables us to further uphold
the integrity of the sport.”
The fraudulent
forms were initially uncovered by Deputy Attorney General Nick Lembo, who is
assigned to the State Athletic Control Board. Detective Nicholas
Olenick, Investigator Ruben Contreras, Detective Christian Harden and Deputy
Attorney General Conrad investigated the case for the Division of Criminal
Justice Specialized Crimes Bureau, under the supervision of Supervising Deputy
Attorney General Andrew M. Butchko, who is Chief of the
Bureau.
AMMA is a full contact
sport that allows the use of both striking and grappling techniques from a
variety of other contact sports. The State provides rules and regulations to the
fighters, promoters and trainers that must be followed in order to participate
in fights in New Jersey Fighters train at various gyms with
trainers. The trainers, such as Dunlap, enter them into
fights.
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