Former Kansas standout and 13-season NBA veteran Marcus Morris Sr. was arrested on Sunday in Broward County, Florida, on a felony fraud charge related to writing a check with insufficient funds, according to jail records and court filings.
The arrest occurred at a South Florida airport, and records indicate the charge is tied to an out-of-state warrant. He is currently being held without bond.
Morris, 35, played collegiately at Kansas from 2008 to 2011, where he earned All–Big 12 honors and was a Consensus Second-Team All-American before being selected 14th overall in the 2011 NBA Draft. Over 13 seasons in the NBA, he suited up for eight teams, compiling averages of 12.0 points, 4.4 rebounds, and 1.5 assists across 832 games.
Following the news, his twin brother, Markieff Morris, posted on X that the “wording is crazy” and criticized the airport arrest as an unnecessary public embarrassment. He insisted the full story would come later. Their agent, Yony Noy, echoed that sentiment, stating that the argument stems from an unpaid casino marker, not fraud as commonly portrayed, and hinting at broader discrepancies in the reporting.
This latest incident marks a troubling extension of past legal issues for Morris. In 2012, he entered a diversion program after a battery charge in Kansas; in 2015, he was acquitted of aggravated assault charges tied to an alleged brawl involving his twin brother Markieff.
Morris had recently been shifting gears toward broadcasting, appearing on ESPN platforms like First Take and Get Up. The arrest and the lack of public bail release raise immediate questions about his future in sports media and any potential NBA return.
Marcus Morris Sr. now faces a legal battle overseas his playing career, with his identity as a Kansas legend and Big 12 star eclipsed by a messy and sudden legal scandal unfolding at 35.