Longtime Alabama sports anchor Mike Raita has been arrested and charged with using his position as executive director of the International Motorsports Hall of Fame for personal gain. This is certainly a wild turn for someone many of us watched cover sports for decades across the state, and honestly, it’s a bit shocking to hear.
According to CBS 42, Raita, who is 67, was arrested on April 2 and released the same day after posting a $25,000 bond. Talladega County Sheriff Jimmy Kilgore confirmed that the arrest came following a grand jury indictment, meaning the case has formally moved into the legal system. Before this, Raita was serving as a regional director for Senator Tommy Tuberville, which just adds another layer to this whole situation.
The charges stem from Raita’s tenure as executive director of the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in Talladega, a role he held from 2020 until 2024. The hall came under scrutiny during a recent audit, where a former employee brought forward serious accusations. They alleged an estimated $236,000 in misspending and mismanagement occurred between 2019 and 2024 by the group’s former accountant.
That audit really opened the door to all of this, didn’t it?
According to a report filed by the Alabama Department of Examiners of Public Accounts in 2025, some eyebrow-raising transactions allegedly involved Raita directly. The report claims that Raita purchased a 1968 Camaro Convertible Pace Car from the hall commission for $15,000 in 2023. What’s wild about this is that the commission apparently spent nearly $23,000 of its own funds fixing the car before Raita bought it.
The report also detailed that Raita’s wife allegedly bought a 1998 F-150 from the commission for a mere $1,000. Following the audit, the entire board of the hall was removed, and Governor Kay Ivey appointed a new 18-member board in November 2025. Legal pressure on sports figures is rising, echoing the recent phishing scheme that hit several NBA and NFL stars.
Raita’s attorney, Tommy Spina, released a statement defending his client. Spina said that Mike hasn’t engaged in any conduct he believed to be unlawful, which is what you’d expect to hear. He added that every action Raita took was done openly, in good faith, and with the full knowledge, authority, and approval of the Hall of Fame’s chairman and board of directors.
Spina also mentioned that they’ve been aware of this investigation for a while and have cooperated fully with the Attorney General’s Office. Mike voluntarily surrendered and made bond promptly. Spina stated that Raita will enter a plea of not guilty and looks forward to addressing these allegations through the proper legal process, asking the public to reserve judgment until all the facts are presented.
For many, Raita’s name is synonymous with sports in Alabama. Originally from Ohio, he made a huge impact covering everything from high school games to college sports. He joined WBRC in 1989, working alongside Rick Karle, and became a familiar face in the sports world. He briefly left Alabama in early 1996 to become sports director at WDTN in Dayton, Ohio, but he was back in Birmingham just a few months later for the launch of ABC 33/40, where he was the lead sports anchor until 2017.
During his time in Birmingham, Raita hosted “The Zone” for nine years, a show that really dug into sports news across the state with local journalists and coaches. He also covered high school football with co-anchor Jeff Speegle. One of his most memorable journalistic moments was when he ambushed former Alabama football coach Dennis Franchione in College Station, Texas, just hours after Franchione announced he was leaving Alabama to take the head coaching job at Texas A&M.
ESPN sports personality Paul Finebaum even wrote the foreword to Raita’s 2019 memoir, “The Show Goes On,” praising his unique style. Finebaum wrote that while many good sportscasters have come through Birmingham, none were as unique as Mike, calling him an original and a one-of-a-kind personality.
Throughout his broadcasting career, Raita racked up several Emmy awards and was named Alabama Sportscaster of the Year by the Associated Press an impressive 10 times.
Published: Apr 7, 2026 03:15 pm