The Owen Hanson cocaine Scandal exposed how a onetime USC walk-on used athletic connections into a growling international crime group, that trafficked cocaine, methamphetamine, heroin and ecstasy.
The group on top of that ran an illegal sports betting and money laundering operations. The investigations that was carried out revealed a rare and violent connection between college athletics and an organized crime.
Hanson’s crime empire, often known ass “ODOG” enterprise, started from selling party drugs and performance enhancers to the college athletes into a wholesale trafficking network.
The operation grew not just in the USA, but Australia as well, roughly between 2012 and 2016.
Though he never rose to the stardom on the field as he wanted with the USC back in the mid 2000s, his connections later aided his criminal network.
Hanson, the Cocaine Quarterback’s network reportedly generated more than $1m daily, during their peak.
The Prosecutors have described the network as a Violent and highly organized criminal groups, who used to threaten and intimidate to collect the debts.
Federal authorities arrested the Cocaine Quarterback in September 2015 following a multiagency investigation and undercover operations.
Cocaine Quarterback is out of the Prison after Serving Part of his Sentence
The former USC player was also pleased guilty to racketeering and drug-trafficking charges . He was sentenced in federal prison in December 2017 for 255 months.
On top of that, He was required to surrender millions of dollars’ worth of property, including homes, cars, jewelry and other assets.
Despite having sentence of over 21 years, Owen Hanson was released from federal prison in March 2024 due to “extraordinary and compelling circumstances.”
Since serving part of the sentence, he has launched a company called California Ice Protein, and has also been featured in Amazon’s “Cocaine Quarterback: Signal-Caller for the Cartel.” The three-part documentary, premiered on September 25, 2025.
The series demonstrates his rise from a USC walk-on football player to a drug kingpin and his subsequent efforts at redemption.
In Case You Didn’t Know
- Hanson wore jersey number 88, at his time with the football team as a walk-on tight end.
- He was part of the roster, when USC won the BCS National Championship in 2003 and 2004.
- Hanson is also a co-author of a book, The California Kid: From USC Golden Boy to International Drug.
