Last year, New York Jets wide receiver Josh Reynolds was shot as he was driving home with his friends from a strip club during his time with the Denver Broncos. Details were mostly scarce at the time of the shooting, but that changed on Friday with a report from the Denver Post.

We now know why Reynolds and his friends were targeted, and the reason is bizarre.

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A group of people ambushed and shot Reynolds because they mistook him and his friends for a group of people who had scammed them out of $250,000 worth of cocaine with counterfeit money, according to unsealed court filings obtained by the Post.

Seven adults from the group behind the shooting have now been arrested on attempted murder chargers, with an eighth adult still at large and a juvenile also charged. One of them, Burr Charlesworth, has since pleaded guilty to felony assault and was sentenced to 10 years in prison on Thursday. He reportedly drove one of the cars used in the shooting.

Two days before the Oct. 18 shooting, two people involved in the attack on Reynolds allegedly met at a Best Western Hotel in Denver, with cleaning staff later finding $37,000 in fake currency, a money counter and “small amounts of white powder.” While it hasn’t been firmly established that was the drug deal gone bad, a witness later testified Charlesworth told him the day of the shooting he’d found the two men who gave them the fake money.

Charlesworth reportedly told police the plan was to find the scammers and “[expletive] them up.” It’s not clear what the source of the confusion was that resulted in the 30-year-old Reynolds being targeted.

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All of that reportedly resulted in as many as four vehicles following Reynolds out of the strip club around 3 a.m. and opening fire in what prosecutors called a “calculated and carefully coordinated assassination attempt.” Reynolds was reportedly shot in the left leg and the back of his head, while one of his friends was shot in the back and another friend was wounded by shattered glass.

Dozens of rounds were reportedly fired into Reynolds’ Ford Bronco, a car that already has some infamous history with the NFL. The shooting disabled the car, leaving Reynolds and his friends to flee on foot and call 911.

Meanwhile, one of the suspects reportedly took a video of the shooting “and sent it to their ‘general’ to prove the incident had been carried out,” according to an arrest affidavit.

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Reynolds was on injured reserve with a finger injury at the time of shooting and ultimately never played another game for the Broncos. The team waived him only a few months into a a two-year, $9 million contract he signed the previous offseason, with the Jacksonville Jaguars picking him up and playing him for four games.

The Jets picked Reynolds up this spring on a one-year deal with $2.75 million guaranteed. He caught two of three targets for 18 yards in the team’s season opener but hasn’t played since due to a hamstring injury.