NBA: Owners set out to remove Sterling

NBA: Owners set out to remove Sterling

NEW YORK - Agence France-Presse

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver has banned Sterling for life and fined him $2.5 million for making racist comments. AP Photo

NBA owners took their first concrete step Thursday towards booting Donald Sterling from their ranks after the disgraced real estate tycoon's racist remarks.
 
Hours after the league's advisory/finance committee held a meeting to discuss NBA Commissioner Adam Silver's recommendation that Sterling be forced to sell the team, reports surfaced that the 80-year-old Sterling is battling cancer.
 
ESPN.com said Thursday that unnamed sources had confirmed Sterling's illness, first reported by the New York Post.
 
On Tuesday, Silver banned Sterling for life from all league activities and fined him $2.5 million over racially charged comments he made to his girlfriend that caused a furor within basketball and beyond after they were aired at the weekend.
 
"This afternoon the Advisory/Finance Committee met via conference call to discuss the process for termination of Donald T. Sterling's ownership of the Los Angeles Clippers," NBA executive vice president Mike Bass said in a brief statement.
 
"The committee unanimously agreed to move forward as expeditiously as possible and will reconvene next week."  

A move to force Sterling to sell would require the approval of three-quarters of the other 29 NBA owners, and Silver said Tuesday he was confident of gaining the needed votes.
 
Sterling snapped up the Clippers for $12 million in 1981. The club is now worth at least $575 million.
 
A swarm of high-profile potential buyers has already surfaced, although Sterling could tie things up if he chooses to challenge any NBA action in court.
 
Under NBA rules, before the league can force him to sell Sterling must be presented with written charges and given time to respond.
 
Silver would then convene the board of governors, which would vote after hearing evidence in the case.
 
While the NBA began to pick its way through the process, fallout continued outside of basketball.
 
The president of the Los Angeles chapter of the NAACP resigned Thursday amid questions about the civil rights organization's relationship with Sterling.
 
Leon Jenkins had announced this week that the group was dropping plans to present Sterling with a lifetime achievement award and would be returning donations Sterling had made to the organization.
 
Nevertheless, questions lingered about the chapter's ties to Sterling, who had previously faced allegations he discriminated against black, Hispanic and Korean tenants at some of his rental properties.