Baseball Legal WTF?!: Shohei Ohtani Interpreter Reportedly Accused of Stealing “Massive” Sums from him UPDATE: NEVERMIND!

playahaitian

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A rough timeline:

- Ohtani rep goes on record W/ESPN stating Ohtani transferred $4.5MM himself to bookmaker on behalf of Ippei.

- Spokesperson for Ohtani delivers Ippei to ESPN for statement. Ippei says Ohtani NEVER bet & felt bad for him & paid off his debt so he’d never do it again.

-Spokesperson for Ohtani says Ippei is lying after he gives his 90 minute statement to ESPN.

- Ohtani’s lawyers claim “massive theft”.

-Ippei then says Ohtani had zero knowledge of his debt or his gambling habit in general. That about right?​
 

playahaitian

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GJJXHNabcAACpR-
 

Complex

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Was he with him with the Angels?

How did he have access to his money? He's an interpreter.
 

playahaitian

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Was he with him with the Angels?

How did he have access to his money? He's an interpreter.

Its worth the read

He been with Ohtani for YEARS they work out together, was at his private wedding and was even included in his latest contract agreement terms. He was like family

That's the multi million dollar question.
 
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playahaitian

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Shohei Ohtani's story doesn't add up. Baseball will protect this dude

^^^^

Was just saying this on the group chat

MLB already said they ain't investigating

That the FIRST report about Ohtan8 wiring the 4 million to the illegal bookie is not true

I think the truth will eventually come out

OR

EVERYONE else will make sure this is a permanent stain on his career
 
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playahaitian

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What if Otani was really betting and Ippei is just the fall guy?


I would think this guy wouldn't be THAT stupid.....
Otani has multiple eyes on all of his business dealings..... you couldn't hide anything like that for long

^^^^

Exactomundo.
 

durham

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Their model minority humble poster child was getting his Pete Rose on. Get the fuck out of here with the interpreter stole $4M and Ohtani was just covering for "his friend"

Dodgers, MLB are getting played. Ohtani and his no winning ass, suckered them for $700M after TWO arm surgeries, and he forced them to sign his unproven homeboy pitcher boy from Japan for $200M+ :lol2:

If his name was Darnell, Plaschke (who rips Lebron weekly in the Los Angeles sports columns would certainly be asking a different type of question about this crazy shit.
 

playahaitian

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Fellas, this is a long read, but we'll worth it. Something is off with that Dodger shit.


Phillies, MLB sources skeptical about Shohei Ohtani’s interpreter being fired over theft, gambling allegations​

Those who spoke on the matter aren't sure what to make of it.



CLEARWATER, Fla. — Like every other facility in Major League Baseball, the Phillies’ clubhouse and hallways were buzzing with the news from an ESPN report that international superstar Shohei Ohtani’s interpreter and friend Ippei Mizuhara allegedly stole as much as $4.5 million from Ohtani to cover sports gambling debts with an illegal bookmaker in California. The Dodgers fired Mizuhara on Wednesday.

Or, Ohtani knowingly covered the debts for Mizuhara, as Mizuhara originally told ESPN. Just before the story surfaced, as the Dodgers prepared to open the season against the Padres in Seoul, South Korea, Mizuhara recanted that account and said Ohtani had no knowledge.

Or, it could be something much more sinister — such as Ohtani somehow being associated with Mathew Bowyer, the Southern California bookie who is the subject of a federal investigation. The ESPN report cites several sources saying Ohtani does not gamble.

Ohtani’s lawyers have disavowed any approval Ohtani might have given for Mizuhara to access funds:

“In the course of responding to recent media inquiries, we discovered that Shohei has been the victim of a massive theft, and we are turning the matter over to the authorities,” Berk Brettler LLP, the firm representing Ohtani, said in a statement.


Bowyer’s lawyers say that Ohtani never had any contact with Bowyer. Ohtani, the reigning American League MVP and a two-time MVP who signed a $700 million deal with the Dodgers in the offseason, is the biggest name in the game, reportedly earning $65 million in endorsements alone. Ohtani reportedly is not facing any discipline or any investigation from or by MLB, which caused outrage among several MLB types at the Phillies spring training game Friday.

However …

Ohtani is the face of a game flagging in popularity. He is the face of numerous corporate entities which would not want to be associated with a gambling scandal. Is he too big to fail?

Like every other facility in baseball, the Phillies’ had lots of questions.

Such as:

How did the interpreter, who says he makes no more than $500,000, convince the bookie to extend him millions of dollars in credit without Ohtani’s knowledge?

“No way,” said one Phillies source.

A former MLB employee familiar with helping players handle their finances pointed out that wire transfers of even a few thousand dollars require multiple levels of authentication and approval from the account holder. Bowyer reportedly received at least $500,000 on at least two occasions. The former employee doubted that even an associate as close as Mizuhara was to Ohtani would be able to authenticate the transfers without Ohtani’s knowledge.

Logic also seems to have suspended itself in Dodgerland.

Why would the interpreter first say that Ohtani had covered his debts, knowing full well that Ohtani would read the story, then say he lied about Ohtani’s generosity on the eve of publication?

“Yeah, a lot of people are saying, ‘That [interpreter] guy’s a piece of crap,’ ” one Phillies player said. “I’ve learned to wait and see how these things play out.”

The rules regarding athletes betting on sports are byzantine and nonuniform. The answer, of course, is for all team personnel in every sport to follow the NCAA example: No sports betting on any sport of any kind.

Major League Baseball’s gambling policy not only prohibits all league and team personnel, including umpires, from betting on baseball but also from making illegal bets on other sports. The penalty for betting on baseball is immediate and indefinite suspension, as Pete Rose can attest. The penalty for illegally gambling on other sports is up to commissioner Rob Manfred.

Since 2021, 12 NFL players were suspended for gambling, and the league stiffened its rules in September. The NCAA reportedly has issued almost 200 suspensions associated with gambling, according to a 2023 report, but, recognizing the change in mores and habits, it recently lessened the penalties for violating the policy.

Given their hypercompetitive nature, their disposable incomes, their youth, and their affinity for technology, one might expect professional athletes to be far more likely to fall to the temptation of irresponsible betting. Then again, many athletes who gamble recreationally see Phil Mickelson and Charles Barkley, who each lost tens of millions to their gambling habits, as cautionary tales.

“Do I maybe like to go to a casino and play blackjack? Sure. But I’m not going to go there and play with thousands and thousands of dollars‚” said Phillies designated hitter Kyle Schwarber. “Yeah, we’re super competitive. It’s not like we’re doing crazy, crazy stuff. We’re not throwing around ridiculous money. I would never do that. And I know I would get my butt kicked.”

Phillies general manager Sam Fuld said Thursday that the Phillies had no plans to remind the players, coaches, and staff of MLB gambling policies. After all, MLB security visited the team two days ago. Part of its presentation was a section on gambling policies, including a list of the 40 states, districts, and territories where sports betting is allowed.

California in 2022 rejected proposals to legalize sports betting, and it remains illegal. Penalties for illegal gambling in California, a misdemeanor, can be up to six months in jail and a $1,000 fine, though California gambling expert I. Nelson Rose last month told the San Francisco Chronicle that the odds of being charged are “near zero.”


BOTTOM LINE TO ME SHOHEI KNEW WHAT THIS MUTHAFUCKA WAS DOIN'. HE DIDN'T STEAL SHIT!!! DODGERS AND MLB COVERED IT UP AND MADE THE INTERPRETER THE FALL GUY. THE 30 FOR 30 ON THIS WILL BE VERY INTERESTING.

WOWZERS
 

playahaitian

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Their model minority humble poster child was getting his Pete Rose on. Get the fuck out of here with the interpreter stole $4M and Ohtani was just covering for "his friend"

Dodgers, MLB are getting played. Ohtani and his no winning ass, suckered them for $700M after TWO arm surgeries, and he forced them to sign his unproven homeboy pitcher boy from Japan for $200M+ :lol2:

If his name was Darnell, Plaschke (who rips Lebron weekly in the Los Angeles sports columns would certainly be asking a different type of question about this crazy shit.

^^^

I'm listening to this tales from Narnia bullsh*t the so called sports media is spinning like this...

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dik cashmere

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Major League Baseball has opened a formal investigation into the matter surrounding Los Angeles Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani and his former interpreter, Ippei Mizuhara, the league announced Friday.

MLB is expected to request interviews with all parties, including Ohtani and Mizuhara, a source told ESPN, although officials will have no way to compel Mizuhara's cooperation since he no longer works for baseball.

Ohtani also has a right to refuse cooperation as a member of the MLB Players Association. Ohtani also could invoke his right, under an interpretation of arbitration precedent, to refuse cooperation because of a criminal investigation that's already underway. Traditionally, MLB has argued a player can invoke such an exception if he is a target of the investigation, which Ohtani is not believed to be.

Major League Baseball said in a statement that it began gathering information about the allegations involving Ohtani and Mizuhara after reports came out this week. Its Department of Investigations began formally investigating the matter Friday, the league said.

The announcement came two days after Mizuhara was fired by the Dodgers as reporters pressed for questions about at least $4.5 million in wire transfers sent from Ohtani's bank account to a bookmaking operation that is under federal investigation.

In a span of two days, Ohtani's handlers moved from saying the slugger had paid Mizuhara's gambling debts to his attorneys announcing Ohtani had been the victim of a "massive theft."

It remains unclear if any authorities are investigating the alleged theft. Ohtani's representatives said Thursday they had officially submitted the allegation to law enforcement but did not say to which authorities. Multiple sources told ESPN that neither the California Bureau of Investigation nor the FBI was working the case.

Spokespersons with the Los Angeles Police Department and district attorney's offices in Los Angeles and Orange counties all said they were not investigating, and they indicated it was most likely a federal matter. The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Central District of California declined to comment.
 

playahaitian

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@jack walsh13 @playahaitian


Major League Baseball has opened a formal investigation into the matter surrounding Los Angeles Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani and his former interpreter, Ippei Mizuhara, the league announced Friday.

MLB is expected to request interviews with all parties, including Ohtani and Mizuhara, a source told ESPN, although officials will have no way to compel Mizuhara's cooperation since he no longer works for baseball.

Ohtani also has a right to refuse cooperation as a member of the MLB Players Association. Ohtani also could invoke his right, under an interpretation of arbitration precedent, to refuse cooperation because of a criminal investigation that's already underway. Traditionally, MLB has argued a player can invoke such an exception if he is a target of the investigation, which Ohtani is not believed to be.

Major League Baseball said in a statement that it began gathering information about the allegations involving Ohtani and Mizuhara after reports came out this week. Its Department of Investigations began formally investigating the matter Friday, the league said.

The announcement came two days after Mizuhara was fired by the Dodgers as reporters pressed for questions about at least $4.5 million in wire transfers sent from Ohtani's bank account to a bookmaking operation that is under federal investigation.

In a span of two days, Ohtani's handlers moved from saying the slugger had paid Mizuhara's gambling debts to his attorneys announcing Ohtani had been the victim of a "massive theft."

It remains unclear if any authorities are investigating the alleged theft. Ohtani's representatives said Thursday they had officially submitted the allegation to law enforcement but did not say to which authorities. Multiple sources told ESPN that neither the California Bureau of Investigation nor the FBI was working the case.

Spokespersons with the Los Angeles Police Department and district attorney's offices in Los Angeles and Orange counties all said they were not investigating, and they indicated it was most likely a federal matter. The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Central District of California declined to comment.

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