Ja Morant incident, explained: NBA investigates red laser, alleged gun threat towards Pacers by friends of Grizzlies star

Gilbert McGregor

Ja Morant incident, explained: NBA investigates red laser, alleged gun threat towards Pacers by friends of Grizzlies star image

The Grizzlies find themselves at the center of another controversy.

According to a report from Bob Kravitz and Sam Amick of The Athletic on Feb. 5, an incident involving associates of All-Star guard Ja Morant and members of the Pacers traveling party led to an NBA investigation.

One month later, The Washington Post added two more allegations to Morant's name, reporting the Grizzlies star guard was "accused of violent or threatening behavior in two police reports," one regarding a mall security director and the other regarding a physical altercation with a teenager.

MORE: Ja Morant assault allegations, explained: Accused of punching 17-year-old, flashing gun

The Washington Post's report also included an updated statement from Morant's agent on the Pacers incident. Here is what we know about the situation, as well as what's been said in the aftermath.

Ja Morant-Pacers incident, explained

The incident occurred on Jan. 29, when the Pacers visited the Grizzlies at Memphis' FedEx Forum. According to The Athletic's report, it began during the game when Morant's father, Tee, and friend, Davonte Pack, engaged in a verbal back-and-forth with a number of Pacers players.

Morant's friend was ultimately escorted off the court and removed from the game.

The Grizzlies would come out with a 112-100 win, but the incident reportedly escalated following the game.

Here's more from The Athletic:

Following a game between the Indiana Pacers and Memphis Grizzlies on Jan. 29 in Memphis, acquaintances of Grizzlies star Ja Morant aggressively confronted members of the Pacers traveling party near the team's bus in the loading area of FedExForum, and later someone in a slow-moving SUV — which Morant was riding in — trained a red laser on them.

Pacers staffers that spoke with The Athletic under the condition of anonymity shared that they were under the belief that the red laser was attached to a gun. According to their account of the situation, there was a Pacers security guard that said "that's 100 percent a gun."

No police report was filed.

The report indicates that in the lead-up to the laser incident, Pack and the Pacers traveling party were engaged in a shouting match in the arena's loading area for 15 to 20 minutes. As Ja Morant and his associates exited the arena in separate vehicles, the laser was pointed in the direction of the Pacers traveling party.

NBA response

NBA spokesperson Mike Bass confirmed the league's investigation, but he could not corroborate that anyone was threatened with a weapon.

Bass added that "certain individuals involved in the postgame situation and a related matter during the game that night have been subsequently banned from attending games in the arena," hinting that Pack would be banned from FedEx Forum for his role in the incident.

Ja Morant response

Not long after the report was published, Morant took to Twitter to share his response to the allegations, saying the investigation revealed lies and the article was an attempt to harm his image. Morant's tweet also hints that Pack has been banned from FedEx forum for a year.

"Did [an] investigation seen they were cappin," Morant tweeted, categorizing the Pacers' allegations as lies. "Still let [an] article come out to paint this negative image on me [and] my fam. [And] banned my brother from home games for a year."

Morant closed his tweet sharing his disbelief and adding a laughing emoji.

On Feb. 7, Morant told reporters that "all that stuff [is] pretty much false." He declined to offer more details about the incident.

"I honestly don't care, bro. At this point in my life, I'm protecting my energy, bro," Morant said. "I'm not responding to nobody else, not entertaining nobody else. That's what they need, likes and clicks."

Ja Morant's agent, Jim Tanner's response

Morant's agent, Jim Tanner, downplayed the allegations, stating, "unsubstantiated rumors and gossip are being put out by people motivated to tear Ja down and tarnish his reputation for their own financial gain," per The Washington Post.

“Any and every allegation involving a firearm has been fully investigated and could not be corroborated. This includes the NBA investigation last month, in which they found no evidence,” Tanner concluded.

Grizzlies response

The franchise declined to comment on the situation outside of acknowledging that it "complied completely with the league's investigation."

"That was addressed internally," Grizzlies head coach Taylor Jenkins said. "[I was] aware of the investigation — the NBA did a full-on investigation, we were fully compliant with it and I think they came out with a statement saying nothing was corroborated or found, so that's what I know and that's what I'm going to comment about."

Gilbert McGregor

Gilbert McGregor Photo

Gilbert McGregor first joined The Sporting News in 2018 as a content producer for Global editions of NBA.com. Before covering the game, McGregor played basketball collegiately at Wake Forest, graduating with a Communication degree in 2016. McGregor began covering the NBA during the 2017-18 season and has been on hand for a number of league events.