It was announced on Wednesday afternoon that Sacramento Kings veteran forward Zach Randolph has reached a plea deal to the charges being dismissed in his possession of marijuana and intent to sell along with resisting arrest that he has agreed to receive 150 hours of community service.

In response to that, Randolph's attorney has released a statement where the 36-year-old stated that he did “nothing wrong” in the incident in question.

Randolph has completely distanced himself from the charges with the intention of removing himself of any blame for how the situation unfolded. This brings clarity to the route of him choosing to strike a plea deal in order to what he believes would be a distraction to the team if he let it drag out and wound up serving some jail time.

The decision to go through an extensive amount of hours of community service is a light trade off as it will not put a cloud over his NBA career. At this point, there is no certainty if the NBA will levy any suspension in response of the situation.

He had inked a two-year, $24 million deal with the Kings over the offseason, which ended his eight-year tenure with the Memphis Grizzlies. Randolph will likely take a significant role off the bench in his first campaign in Sacramento while providing veteran leadership.