A Xavier McKinney Imposter and How It Impacts the Green Bay Packers' Star
· Yahoo Sports
Somebody tried to impersonate Green Bay Packers star Xavier McKinney in order to receive a massive financial loan.
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That plan has reportedly been found out and thwarted, but one has to wonder how and if this will impact the actual Xavier McKinney.
As it's being reported, first by veteran reporter Daniel Kaplan, that someone posed as McKinney to try to get a $4.375 million loan from the lender. That lender is now suing the broker, who apparently believed that this was the actual McKinney.
The lender is Aliya Sports Finance Fund, which is suing the broker, Sure Sports, for "alleged negligence in failing to perform due diligence when introducing the McKinney imposter to the lender for a seven-figure loan," Mike Florio of ProFootballTalk wrote.
This is not a new update. It's just something that has now come to the public's attention via Kaplan's reporting. The civil complaint was actually filed a year ago in Florida, where both ASFF and Sure Sports are located.
The trial will begin on July 13, 2026, and one would imagine the $87,500 that Sure Sports made for introducing the McKinney imposter to ASFF will be in question as well.
"ASFF has come to learn that the borrower apparently was not McKinney, but rather a third party who impersonated McKinney to facilitate the disbursement and theft of the Loan proceeds," the lawsuit reportedly reads, per Florio.
The McKinney imposter has not been named, but one has to imagine that this person may not have a basic understanding of NFL contracts, salaries, and free agency. McKinney signed a four-year, $67 million contract with the Packers on March 14, 2024, with a $23 million signing bonus. The loan closed on April 2, 2024.
Green Bay Packers safety Xavier McKinney is shown before their preseason game against there Seattle Seahawks Saturday, August 23, 2025 at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wisconsin. © Mark Hoffman/Milwaukee Journal Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images.The real McKinney just made generational money in free agency, so why would he need a $4.375 million loan just a few weeks later?
Apparently, nobody did their due diligence here.
As far as McKinney is concerned, he's not a party to the current lawsuit, but one would imagine that there are now certain difficulties he'll have to traverse. Somebody successfully impersonated him (at least for the time being), so how does that impact things like social security, credit, and any other financial dealings he's involved with?
He may even sue this imposter himself, though let's be clear, that hasn't happened as of yet.
Either way, McKinney may want to double-check his important information and the way that he stores it, because this imposter clearly had access to things that allowed this scam to progress.
Per Florio and Kaplan, McKinney had already been victimized in a fraud and sex trafficking scheme that targeted NFL and NBA players