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Ippei Mizuhara Sentenced To 57 Months In Prison

By Darragh McDonald | February 6, 2025 at 5:25pm CDT

Ippei Mizuhara, former interpreter for Shohei Ohtani, was sentenced to 57 months in prison today. Per Sam Blum of The Athletic, there will be three years of supervised release and Mizuhara has been ordered to pay Ohtani nearly $17MM in restitution.

In March of 2024, reports emerged that millions of dollars had been wired from an account in Ohtani’s name to an illegal gambling ring. Mizuhara initially said that Ohtani agreed to the transfer in order to help him with gambling debts. Ohtani’s attorneys provided an alternative narrative, stating that the player “had been the victim of a massive theft” and Mizuhara was fired by the Dodgers. MLB opened an investigation into the matter shortly thereafter.

Ohtani then read a statement to the media, interpreted by Dodgers employee Will Ireton, who had replaced Mizuhara. Ohtani stated that he had never bet on baseball, nor any other sport. He also claimed to have had no knowledge of Mizuhara’s behavior until just before the recent reporting. “Ippei has been stealing money from my account and has told lies,” Ohtani said.

In April of 2024, Mizuhara was charged with bank fraud, alleged to have transferred more than $16MM from Ohtani’s account to the betting ring. Prosecutors identified Ohtani as a victim in the case. Mizuhara allegedly set up the account with Ohtani in 2018, when the player was first making the move from Japan to North America. The two had met while both were employed by the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters, Ohtani’s Nippon Professional Baseball club.

Per the allegations, Mizuhara repeatedly contacted the bank and pretended to be Ohtani in order to access the account and get money to fuel his gambling habit. Ohtani’s agent repeatedly asked about the account but Mizuhara told him it was “private” and that Ohtani didn’t want anyone else to monitor it. Ohtani, meanwhile, believed that his accountants and financial advisors were monitoring the accounts. Since Mizuhara handled all the language interpretation between Ohtani and his team, each side remained unaware of what was going on.

Investigators had also seen text messages from Mizuhara admitting to the theft. “Technically I did steal from him,” one message read. “It’s all over for me.” Investigators viewed the text messages between Ohtani and Mizuhara, finding no evidence that the player had made any bets on sports, nor that he knew anything about Mizuhara’s betting. Though Mizuhara made hundreds of bets on sports, there is no evidence of him betting on baseball.

In May of 2024, Mizuhara pled guilty to multiple charges, including bank fraud and subscribing to a false tax return. It was suggested at that time that Mizuhara would likely be deported to Japan once the legal process had played out. Major League Baseball closed its investigation into Ohtani in June, citing the thorough investigation which had pointed to the player being a victim, with no charges against him. Per Blum, Mizuhara’s attorneys expect him to be deported, as Mizuhara is a permanent resident of the United States but not a citizen.

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View Comments (332)
Post a Comment

332 Comments

  1. chiefnocahoma1

    4 months ago

    Got a nice nest egg waiting for when he gets out I’m sure.

    67
    Reply
    • towinagain

      4 months ago

      Surprised that the “Comments Closed” wasn’t used.

      53
      Reply
      • Monkey’s Uncle

        4 months ago

        He’s not here right now. Leave a message after the “beep”.

        4
        Reply
      • Chuck from Uniontown

        4 months ago

        Wait until Ohtani’s new interpretor also turns out to be a degenerate gambler.

        19
        Reply
        • Unclemike1526

          4 months ago

          When I first glanced at this I thought it said 57 years. LOL

          2
          Reply
        • HEHEHATE

          4 months ago

          He’s just addicted to ketamine and escorts it’s cool though.

          Reply
        • Whitecowboy

          4 months ago

          100%. No way ohtani didn’t know. He’s fall guy for new face of mlb.

          8
          Reply
      • Not the real Sports Pope

        4 months ago

        Same

        Reply
    • njbirdsfan

      4 months ago

      Don’t worry it will be there, but it will be deferred.

      11
      Reply
      • KnicksFanCavsFan

        4 months ago

        @nj

        Reply
    • Bivouac-Sal

      4 months ago

      typical bs. mute

      2
      Reply
    • kingbum

      4 months ago

      Sentenced to 8 years with an opt out clause after 5….upon release after 5 years 3 years will be deffered for a later date in the event of future bad behavior….Brightside is after the 5 years is up he can just get himself deported and not pay Ohtani a thing….

      5
      Reply
      • Mark Smith

        4 months ago

        He can just file bankruptcy and not pay. But does anyone even believe the story? How can anyone be dumb enough to not notice they’re being robbed of $17 million? That takes a really dumb person to do that.

        14
        Reply
        • Anthony maresca

          4 months ago

          Exactly its the biggest coverup scam in all of sports and its pathetic mlb turned a blind eye to protect a player who is NOT an American citizen and defrauded the system by deferring almost his entire $700 million to bypass the American tax system since after he is retired he will collect his money while living in Japan. Its pathetic and I hope he blows out his pitching arm and his rotar cuff surgery renders him to never be the same player he once was!

          7
          Reply
        • jeffmaz

          4 months ago

          The full investigation was only 1 month before it was stopped when the interpreter plead guilty (took the fall). That’s one month total for MLB, dodgers, the FBI, secret service, Justice department, banks, etc. Investigations don’t happen that fast.

          8
          Reply
        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          Mark Smith, What’s more unbelievable? Someone robbed by someone they trusted, or MLB, the IRS, and the DOJ all conspiring together to cover up for a baseball player?

          13
          Reply
        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          jeffmaz, So you actually believe that all those entities conspired together, and there’s not a single text message, email, phone log, etc. as evidence of the conspiracy?

          And you actually believe the FBI, Secret Service, and DOJ would risk being exposed as helping cover up. What was the benefit to all those agencies to do that? What was the reward for covering up? Would they actually weigh the risk/reward and decide, “yeah, count us in on the cover up”.

          7
          Reply
        • dpsmith22

          4 months ago

          2 years for Bauer and 1 month for him…cover up for MLB’s cash cow.

          2
          Reply
        • dpsmith22

          4 months ago

          whew where have you been the last 4 years?

          1
          Reply
        • Jaysfansince92

          4 months ago

          Why does it matter whether or not they’re an American citizen? This whole America good, everyone else bad thing is getting kind of ridiculous.

          2
          Reply
        • Whitecowboy

          4 months ago

          Those entities have never conspired before. They are 100% incorruptible. $

          Reply
        • brodie-bruce

          4 months ago

          @mark smith

          He could try and file for bankruptcy but doesn’t mean the 17 mil owed will go away, he could still be ordered to pay that. Alex jones tried to pull that and the judge basically told him you can’t file for bankruptcy to get out of paying your lawsuit.

          1
          Reply
        • brodie-bruce

          4 months ago

          @jean matrac

          If it is a conspiracy just give a few years someone involved will spill the beans, there is way to many people involved in this one for anyone to stfu for there lives.

          1
          Reply
        • unpaidobserver

          4 months ago

          I guess you just aint been alive long enough to know when BS is BS. You can tell me anything you want but I smell it when I smell it.

          Reply
        • unpaidobserver

          4 months ago

          My friend the idea that institutions look out for us is how 98% of the wealth in our national currency was stolen.

          Reply
        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          I turn 76 years old in June. I have more than enough experience with BS than most. Facts and hard evidence are all that matters, not some non-critical thinking to fit with what you want to believe.

          1
          Reply
        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          This I totally agree with. But institutions look after themselves first. And those institutions aren’t risking anything to cover up for Ohtani, MLB, or anyone else, unless there’s some huge advantage in doing so. So tell me, what exactly is that advantage they’d be gaining by joining MLB in a conspiracy to cover up?

          2
          Reply
        • PessimisticRedleg

          4 months ago

          This seems aggressive

          Reply
        • Silas

          4 months ago

          @Jean, yes because the FBI, DOJ and IRS are squeaky clean orgs said no one EVER.

          Reply
        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          Reading comprehension is important. You’re missing what I’ve been saying. I never said they were squeaky clean. Why don’t you tell me what benefit they would’ve gotten by covering up for MLB and Ohtani.

          The government is terrible at keeping secrets, and the presence of a cross-department conspiracy, would certainly be leaked. Believing that all those agencies conspired, with nothing to gain, and risking exposure, is just incredibly naive.

          Reply
        • LGM1979

          4 months ago

          The only conspiracy necessary would be the guy saying he did it and Ohtani.

          Reply
    • MLB Top 100 Commenter

      4 months ago

      Yippee-Ki-Yay

      youtube.com/watch?v=zca9zEKejjY

      1
      Reply
    • Arnold Ziffel

      4 months ago

      He will be out in probably 4 years or less, then will live very comfortably from then on. Hopefully, while in jail, he gets a visit from big Bubba.

      Reply
      • Bivouac-Sal

        4 months ago

        someone posted earlier that in the federal prison system you are only eligible for 54 days reduction per year served.

        1
        Reply
        • MLB Top 100 Commenter

          4 months ago

          57 months is 4 years and 9 months. So if he can get 256 days off, that would be four years. So in his first sentence, “Arnold Ziffel” is correct.

          But Arnold Ziffel also says that he hopes Ippe will “get a visit from Big Bubba”. Sounds like Arnold Ziffel has prison r@pe fantasies. So sad.

          3
          Reply
        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          MLB Top 100 Commenter, By your figuring, you’re giving him credit for 9 months he had not served. At 4 years, when he supposedly can get out, he should only be at 2i6 days off, a little over 7 months. After about 4 years and 2 months is when he should have accrued enough to be released.

          2
          Reply
        • MLB Top 100 Commenter

          4 months ago

          Jean Matrac

          Good catch, he can’t get a day a week off for those last seven months.

          2
          Reply
        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          Well, maybe a couple.

          Reply
      • BlueSkies_LA

        4 months ago

        Yes, he’ll have a ball with that $17M in debt.

        Reply
      • HatlessPete

        4 months ago

        Ziffel…thats kind of a sick fantasy dude. Wtf is wrong with you?

        1
        Reply
    • terrymesmer

      4 months ago

      A truly ignorant comment. This is not a coverup. Read the indictment and plea agreement (as I have) — there is plenty of hard evidence of Mizuhara’s guilt. There is even audio of Mizuhara impersonating Ohtani on the phone.

      6
      Reply
      • dpsmith22

        4 months ago

        except it’s that little thing called documentation that he didn’t have

        Reply
  2. BeingARedsFanHurts

    4 months ago

    The fact to Ohtani walked away from this unscathed is mind boggling still. ‍♂️

    52
    Reply
    • ¡Killer Klowns From Outer Space!

      4 months ago

      Money+Power+Fame+cult of society+social media

      11
      Reply
      • kodion

        4 months ago

        Interpreter: Ticket sales trump keeping the game “clean”?
        Somebody knew there was an issue. Ohtani’s agent repeatedly asked about the account. And the professionals entrusted with managing that money failed in their responsibility if they didn’t see, and question the same.
        My question is: Does Ohtani himself knows so little English that he couldn’t realize something was wrong long before it became the fiasco it did?
        Seems to me there might still be more to this story than we’ve been told

        1
        Reply
        • JoeBrady

          4 months ago

          Ticket sales trump keeping the game “clean”?
          ============================
          Unless Ohtani bet on BB, then yes, baseball trumps cleanliness. I’m not going to give up watching BB, or my roto teams, just because Ohtani’s blew through $17M or so.

          And yes, Ohtani has passable English, but like many others, would prefer to speak their native language when possible.

          Reply
    • ATinz

      4 months ago

      Walked away from what exactly? Don’t just blurt some nonsense, gather real facts. I’ll wait here.

      15
      Reply
      • Lloyd Emerson

        4 months ago

        I love it when people say “I’ll wait here” on a comment thread. It reduces them to exactly what they are.

        15
        Reply
        • ATinz

          4 months ago

          I’m still here…….waiting.

          5
          Reply
        • BaseballBrewTown

          4 months ago

          I’ll wait there.

          1
          Reply
      • terrymesmer

        4 months ago

        These fools think their conspiracy mongering is merely skepticism, a healthy questioning of a narrative. But it is denialism, which is pseudoskepticism.

        13
        Reply
        • MLB Top 100 Commenter

          4 months ago

          Terry

          Your conclusion may have truth, but your use of long words makes you look like a fool.

          5
          Reply
        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          MLB Top 100 Commenter, Your post makes you look like someone that suffers from hippopotomonstrosesquippedaliophobia. Or, if you prefer a little brevity, sesquipedalophobia.

          2
          Reply
        • MLB Top 100 Commenter

          4 months ago

          If it is longer than Encarnacion, I’m not reading it.

          2
          Reply
        • JPR

          4 months ago

          well said!

          1
          Reply
        • Hammerin' Hank

          4 months ago

          Yeah, Terry and ATinz, keep believing everything you’re told without ever questioning a thing. It’s got to all be true, right?

          1
          Reply
        • Jaysfansince92

          4 months ago

          Those really aren’t that big of words. Nor are they difficult to understand. The fact that you think they are really says more about you than they do about him.

          Has the education system really gone this far downhill?

          1
          Reply
        • JoeBrady

          4 months ago

          Jaysfansince92
          Those really aren’t that big of words.
          =====================
          The words are quite understandable. The issue, from my perspective, is that Terry never really elucidated his opinion.

          Reply
        • ATinz

          4 months ago

          Coming from a guy that believes that Ohtani is guilty without any facts. See how that works?

          Reply
        • JoeBrady

          4 months ago

          Coming from a guy that believes that Ohtani is guilty without any facts.
          =============================
          I laid out probably ten different issues that are extremely difficult to believe.

          The very first one is that one would need to believe that Ohtani didn’t open up a single bank statement in 26 months, in an account with $16M in it. Exactly no one in the world does something like that.

          If you want to believe it, I couldn’t care less. But that alone is near impossible.

          2
          Reply
        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          First off, The account Mizuhara stole from, was also the one he helped Otani open, so Ohtani did open an account. Ohtani also had a separate account for his endorsement money, that was controlled by his agent.

          That said, you think Ohtani being so trusting and unaware, is more unbelievable than MLB, the IRS, and DOJ, all conspiring together to cover up for Ohtani?

          A conspiracy that large would involve a lot of people, and there’s not a single piece of evidence of that conspiracy.
          It’s obvious why MLB might want to do that. But what’s the reward for the Feds risking exposure in a cover up?

          Ohtani’s oversight of his financial affairs is shockingly naive. But still far more believable than them participating in a vast conspiracy without any benefit to them.

          2
          Reply
        • BlueSkies_LA

          4 months ago

          @Jean Matrac. You are overlooking one key factor: Conspiracy theories don’t require any evidence, they are built entirely on bias confirmation. Once a mind is made up to confirm a bias, evidence can be manufactured to support the bias and all contrary evidence is rejected as simply being part of the conspiracy.

          A person can save themselves from going down this road to delusional thinking (which is an actual mental illness), but they have to start with asking themselves some honest questions. The first one is to self-challenge their reasons for holding the bias in the first place. But this takes effort, and conspiracy theories are fundamentally a function of lazy thinking. This is why they are so persistent.

          2
          Reply
        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          No, I’m really not overlooking that. I’m well aware of the delusional thinking from the rejection of any facts contrary to what someone wants to believe. It’s just so mind boggling how delusional some people are. Critical thinking is something in very short supply these days.

          1
          Reply
        • BlueSkies_LA

          4 months ago

          Indeed so. Even baseball discussions provide no refuge anymore.

          Reply
      • Mark Smith

        4 months ago

        Ohtani for sure was the gambler. Nobody has ever explained how he was being robbed of $17 million and he never noticed. He’d still be getting robbed if the investigation of the bookie never happened. I don’t believe a word of this story. Major League Baseball got involved. They want Ohtani to be the big star. They couldn’t let him be guilty of gambling. I bet Ippei never even goes to prison. He’ll probably live in the lap of luxury the next few years until his time is over.

        3
        Reply
        • JPR

          4 months ago

          I hear there is a two for one tinfoil sale in your neighborhood tomorrow.

          8
          Reply
        • HatlessPete

          4 months ago

          Mark Smith, the article you’re commenting on literally describes multiple plausible factors that led to ohtani not noticing what ippei was doing lol. Idk why people like you can’t let this go. Yall really want ohtani to be the bad guy for some reason and can’t seem to even reasonably entertain the possibility that he just got screwed over by someone he relied on and trusted to help him navigate his day to day life.

          4
          Reply
        • believeitornot

          4 months ago

          I don’t know if shohei gambled. However, this story reminds me of when Michael Jordan took two years off and played baseball. It’s possible he was actually suspended for gambling and the league wanted to keep it quiet their biggest star was a degenerate gambler.

          2
          Reply
        • sergefunction

          4 months ago

          Still with this Michael Jordan gambling conspiracy.

          An alternate scenario made more sense to me:

          * The man’s father was horribly murdered specifically for the car son had bought for him.

          * When the father’s body was fished from the river like garbage, authorities sawed off his jaw and fingertips for ID purposes that were in all likelihood never intended to be run. The rest was incinerated like last week’s trash.

          * When Jordan saw his dad’s empty seat at the arena, the spot he could always look to for comfort, he couldn’t deal with that, with the horrid images of what happened, and with the guilt he felt. He needed to change absolutely everything around him that he could. He desperately needed an escape.

          This brought to play another scene playing in his head – that his father never really gave up his dream for the son to play baseball – and the son had direct access to a man who could give him that real-life experience right now.

          If you haven’t been there (few if anyone ever has) or somewhat close to there (which is more than an unlucky few), you cannot begin to imagine what those relentless, grinding images can do to you, to your soul, to your well-being.

          This is likely what led Michael Jordan to the Birmingham Barons. Once some time had passed, the pain lessened to the point where he could go back to the old life.

          What does this have to do with Ohtani? Squat doodly. But it allows me to address conspiracists and their haughty ignorance about things with which they know absolutely nothing.

          4
          Reply
        • believeitornot

          4 months ago

          At least I don’t think the fbi was behind Jan 6 2021.

          1
          Reply
        • believeitornot

          4 months ago

          Or Nancy.

          Reply
    • VegasMoved

      4 months ago

      Only to people who never read beyond the initial story.

      3
      Reply
    • case

      4 months ago

      Don’t worry, the illuminati are going to use their hurricane machine to create a distraction during his prison break.

      5
      Reply
    • i like al conin

      4 months ago

      No compassion for Ohtani? He is the victim.

      7
      Reply
      • HEHEHATE

        4 months ago

        No. Not at all.

        videos.marca.com/v/0_ljmyeki0-shohei-ohtani-potent…

        Reply
      • Mark Smith

        4 months ago

        Ohtani is a victim? What a joke. But if he is then he’s the biggest idiot ever. He let someone steal $17 million from him. That takes a really stupid person.

        1
        Reply
        • VegasMoved

          4 months ago

          Plenty of intelligent people get defrauded all the time. The “it could never happen to me” folks are the easiest targets.

          3
          Reply
      • Bochys Retirement Fund

        4 months ago

        I love the use of the word “victim” in western society. Ohtani had massive amounts of money taken from him (that somehow no one in his orbit noticed) so we, collectively, should view him as a victim.

        Reply
    • Patriot12992

      4 months ago

      What do you propose he was wrong, do you not bug the findings that he did not know?

      1
      Reply
      • HEHEHATE

        4 months ago

        I just have a feeling.

        You know if this is Munenori Kawasaki vs othani on this the narrative is awfully different for Mizuhara.

        Reply
        • Kevin Illyanovich Rasputin Kubusheskie

          4 months ago

          “I just have a feeling.” Well then of course he is guilty cause HEHEHATE feels it. No need for evidence . This is such the keyboard warrior mentality.

          9
          Reply
        • HEHEHATE

          4 months ago

          I didn’t make international news for gambling. But you bet there’s major cover up on this. It’s all for globalization. Nothing more nothing less.

          Reply
    • underdog

      4 months ago

      It’s mind boggling that people still think Ohtani was guilty of a crime here. Zero evidence of it. And yes I read all the reports and investigation and every story about this. His trusted interpreter had a gambling problem and screwed him over in ways that were documented and proven. He confessed. There is no evidence pointing to Ohtani committing crimes. The only “crime” he committed was not paying enough attention and I guess being a superstar well paid foreign player for the most-obsessed team, the LA Dodgers.

      19
      Reply
      • Appalachian_Outlaw

        4 months ago

        People will always believe what they want to believe, regardless of the facts, underdog.

        7
        Reply
      • Mark Smith

        4 months ago

        Obviously you believe everything you read. I’ll never believe it. I see no real evidence. The part about Ohtani not knowing he was being robbed of millions makes no sense.

        Reply
        • VegasMoved

          4 months ago

          Just curious, what ARE you basing your beliefs on, if not the facts?

          1
          Reply
        • DroppedThirdStrike

          4 months ago

          When you look at your one bank account and have to check the balance to see if you can eat at Taco Bell and still pay rent on time, you notice if money is missing. If you have dozens of accounts and money being moved between accounts and more money coming in all the time and then large percents of that money being invested in stocks and other investments and you have an interpreter with access to all those accounts… well bad things can happen and you might not notice for some time.

          4
          Reply
        • Appalachian_Outlaw

          4 months ago

          It’s easily believable when you consider what he earns, and that it all wasn’t taken out at once. When you earn the way Ohtani does, you don’t have to check your bank statements. Plus, Ohtani knew the guy since he was eighteen years old; I’m sure he trusted him, and might’ve even considered him a friend. The judicial system would also have no reason to protect Ohtani.

          I don’t believe everything I read, but I do believe factual things.

          3
          Reply
        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          Mark Smith, This was in newspapers in 2012 for an embezzlement that went on between 2002 and 2008 in:

          Melissa King, 60, the administrator for Sandhogs Local 147 (NYC) was sentenced to six years in federal prison for stealing $42 million from union bank accounts so she could live like the super rich. Many of the workers had their retirement accounts emptied and have been left nearly penniless. King spent millions on private jets and $1 million in jewelry, as well as other jewelry worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. She spent $7 million on an American Express card and $300,000 on shopping sprees.

          So, since it defies logic that nobody noticed for 6 years, this can’t be true right? Unlike Ohtani, a single person trusting a friend, the union had to have accountants with oversight, and banks reporting huge deductions. According to your logic, she’s just the fall guy.

          2
          Reply
    • SkenesandSlopes

      4 months ago

      Being the top star has it’s perks.

      Reply
    • Jarred Kelenic's Beer Can

      4 months ago

      I dunno, having $17 million stolen out from under his nose doesn’t seem like he went out of this unscathed.

      Reply
    • unpaidobserver

      4 months ago

      Its okay. The sharper the rise the harder the fall.

      Reply
  3. how bout dem rangers

    4 months ago

    He deserved it tbh

    1
    Reply
  4. J.gonz156

    4 months ago

    Hes a good soldier, took the hit and shut his mouth.

    28
    Reply
    • orange2001

      4 months ago

      It is funny how Ippei initially claimed that the money was borrowed from Ohtani, and Ohtani’s rep corroborated this story, until they realized the implications. Then everybody (including Ippei) immediately changed their tune.

      23
      Reply
      • Bivouac-Sal

        4 months ago

        @orange
        not accurate

        the initial amount that was in question was a tiny fraction of the actual fraud. It was only when the full extent of the crime came to light that the facts changed the story.

        2
        Reply
        • Mark Smith

          4 months ago

          Not true. The story was Ohtani was involved until lawyers and Major League Baseball got involved. Manfred helped make sure Ippei got paid to take the fall so Manfred could have his big star playing for the idiot Dodgers.

          4
          Reply
        • VegasMoved

          4 months ago

          Again, what are you basing this on? There’s no evidence to support your claim, so where are you getting this from, besides your imagination?

          4
          Reply
        • Bivouac-Sal

          4 months ago

          you have no idea what you are talking about smith

          2
          Reply
      • Easy as 1 2 3

        4 months ago

        It’s also interesting how ippei is the only person to go down for this. You’d think ohtani’s camp would go after the bank or people responsible in letting Ippei do this. If I found out my bank and accountants let someone steal upward of 40 mill from me you’d bet I’d be after some people’s jobs.

        Havent heard of any banks getting in trouble or anyone else from Ohtani’s world like his accountants get the axe. Weird how it’s just one guy.

        3
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        • Kevin Illyanovich Rasputin Kubusheskie

          4 months ago

          You clearly have no idea how the legal system works, or how banks conduct their own internal investigations and don’t publicly leak any action that might have resulted.

          1
          Reply
        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          Easy as 1 2 3, Just because you would have gone after the banks doesn’t mean anything. Clearly Ohtani blames Mizuhara for violating his trust, and not the bans.

          1
          Reply
        • Easy as 1 2 3

          4 months ago

          wtf does legal system have to do with Ohtani firing incompetent accountants?

          Yeah the face of mlb who was robbed 40 million dollars it’d go completely unnoticed if banks took actions or Ohtani fired people. It’d be completely secret no one would notice lmao.

          That’s what you gonna go with?

          Reply
        • Easy as 1 2 3

          4 months ago

          Yeah keep the same accountants that lost you 40 million dollars

          Reply
        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          Rant all you want, but what you’d would do is irrelevant. You’d blame the bank. Ohtani is blaming Mizuhara, I’m pretty sure Ohtant has much better knowledge of what actually went on than any of us.

          2
          Reply
        • JPR

          4 months ago

          This may come as a surprise, but “that sounds weird to me” does not usually work in criminal proceedings.

          5
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        • Easy as 1 2 3

          4 months ago

          Works for personal matters just fine

          Like it’s weird to me he still has the same people who let Ippei steal 40 million dollars from his accounts still be employed handling his finances.

          Thats like crapping your pants and changing your shirt.

          Reply
        • Easy as 1 2 3

          4 months ago

          I’d also blame my personal financial team / accountants who I pay to make sure this exact thing doesn’t happen…….and not only did it happen……it happened to the tune of 40 million dollars.

          It’s still weird none of them were fired over this. Letting the same people who let 40 million dollars go missing from your accounts still manage your finances makes 0 sense.

          Wasn’t just ippei involved. There were others on banks side and ohtanis finance side who didn’t do their jobs correctly.

          And yet. Nobody is fired over this type of epic failure.

          Reply
        • HatlessPete

          4 months ago

          None of us really know whether anyone was fired, you’re just assuming that nobody was because it fits your narrative.

          We know what’s going on with ippei because he was criminally charged, making it public record. It’s not generally a criminal offense for a bank employee to be duped in commission of a fraud. And ohtani and his people have no obligation to disclose how private financial and employment relationships were impacted once it was discovered. So any fallout in these business relationships is not something the general public has any right to be notified of or access in the manner of criminal court proceedings meaning this isn’t the smoking gun you’re making it out to be.

          2
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        • JoeBrady

          4 months ago

          If I found out my bank and accountants let someone steal upward of 40 mill from me you’d bet I’d be after some people’s jobs.
          =================================
          That’s what 99% people would do. The problem is that the bank’s response would be “The outflow was going on for 26 months. Did you not check your bank statements for the past 26 months, like 99% of the world’s population would do?

          Reply
  5. Longtimecoming

    4 months ago

    But it’s been deferred until 2050!

    35
    Reply
    • gray

      4 months ago

      Amazing

      Reply
    • scarfish

      4 months ago

      Solid

      Reply
    • Kevin Illyanovich Rasputin Kubusheskie

      4 months ago

      Only amazing and solid thing about this is that 20 sheep / drones actually liked this tired platitude.

      2
      Reply
      • Longtimecoming

        4 months ago

        23 and heading to 100+. It’s funny. Don’t take everything so seriously Kev.

        2
        Reply
        • Kevin Illyanovich Rasputin Kubusheskie

          4 months ago

          32 is heading to 100. the new math folks!

          Reply
  6. braveshomer

    4 months ago

    How much extra does he get paid for being the fall guy?!….kidding kidding before everyone attacks as I don’t know much of what really happened lol

    4
    Reply
    • Jobu's Rum

      4 months ago

      It’s in the public court indictment and case files. There are going to be people who choose to ignore them and run with their own narratives with a death grip.

      6
      Reply
      • sheagoodbye

        4 months ago

        We are now a country of conspiracy theorists, so that’s hardly a surprise..

        6
        Reply
        • 84LeFlore

          4 months ago

          In a crime-ridden country such as ours, conspiracies to commit crimes occurs regularly. As a result, theories develop by those paying attention.

          1
          Reply
        • sheagoodbye

          4 months ago

          You should write a book, Sounds like you’ve got it all figured out.

          3
          Reply
        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          Conspiracy is a crime and is often a charge in RICO and other cases. But evidence is what matters, not theories.

          2
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        • Hammerin' Hank

          4 months ago

          No, we’re actually a nation of gullible people who watch the news and believe every word of it.

          2
          Reply
        • sheagoodbye

          4 months ago

          If by “news” you mean any news—Fox News, CNN, etc—then I wholeheartedly agree. Most everyone is trying to mislead and manipulate.

          Reply
        • JoeBrady

          4 months ago

          Spot-on. Even back in day, when journalism was a real job, I made sure I read both the NYT and WSJ. Too many people have gotten comfortable with their own echo chamber.

          Reply
    • zarbend

      4 months ago

      ask greg anderson, re: bonds, barry

      Reply
  7. Chuck from Uniontown

    4 months ago

    Screw Ohtani.

    11
    Reply
  8. HEHEHATE

    4 months ago

    And just remember. Pete rose is dead and othani’s an mvp. What a wacky world baseball truly is.

    15
    Reply
    • Chuck from Uniontown

      4 months ago

      Baseball sold its soul to Fanduel and it’s completely taking the fun out of the game for me.

      10
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      • HEHEHATE

        4 months ago

        Video killed the radio star.

        Gambling certainly isn’t in baseballs best interest.

        But man the shock wave of giving othani the Pete rose treatment over this would ruined international interest in coming to play this game in mlb.

        4
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        • deweybelongsinthehall

          4 months ago

          Rose was scum but hopefully the full story will come out if there is more (which I believe there is).

          2
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        • Patriot12992

          4 months ago

          But that doesn’t actually prove anything, constructing a narrative does not equate to evidence.

          Reply
        • stymeedone

          4 months ago

          But constructing a narrative does sell a book. I’ll wait for the movie.

          Reply
        • case

          4 months ago

          Pete would have gone the way of Wander Franco in the modern game.

          Reply
      • Bivouac-Sal

        4 months ago

        well you can always BUC youself up with hate Chuck

        Reply
    • westcasey

      4 months ago

      and Josh Gibson has highest lifetime batting average, ahead of Ty Cobb,
      He passed him up despite being dead! yet Ole Josh never played in MLB.

      1
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      • HEHEHATE

        4 months ago

        It’s not Josh’s fault though, reading the stories on him some of the pitching must have been god awful to that bat to ball skill. Baseball has moved forward. But this one here certainly put itself back a few moves on the board.

        1
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    • Bivouac-Sal

      4 months ago

      @hehehate
      in other words there is justice in this world

      1
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      • HEHEHATE

        4 months ago

        Maybe a smidgen. But morality doesn’t exist in baseball. No we all know that.

        1
        Reply
        • Bivouac-Sal

          4 months ago

          @hehe
          The justice I referred to was in regard to your Pete & Ohtani comment.

          1
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        • HEHEHATE

          4 months ago

          I believe people should be held to the same standards. This is baseball protecting international interest.

          Giving othani the Pete rose treatment you’ll never see another Dominican beg to come play Major League Baseball.

          Rose is no saint. It’s broaching beyond pedophila with him. Yet that was overlooked during career but gambling wasn’t.

          Mizuhara should be bared from mlb outright yes. But othani got a free pass over publicity and he shouldn’t be alone in jail today.

          That’s my gripe on this.

          Othani is far from the victim here.

          1
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        • stymeedone

          4 months ago

          Who is this Othani you speak of?

          Reply
        • ATinz

          4 months ago

          Where is the evidence????
          You do not have any, because there isn’t any. Stop spewing your nonsense unless you can give us clear cut evidence and not just a “feeling” that you have.

          2
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        • HatlessPete

          4 months ago

          Yes, I’m sure nobody would be at all interested in the money, lifestyle and etc that comes with being a pro athlete if there was any evidence whatsoever that ohtani was involved in gambling himself and the league acted on that lol. Jfc dude what a clown take.

          1
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      • drprofsps

        4 months ago

        Amen! As a white Texas Rangers fan, I would rather see the good character of Josh Gibson in first place than the bad character of Ty Cobb!

        1
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    • VegasMoved

      4 months ago

      If only MLB had banned Ohtani, Pete Rose wouldn’t have passed at the tender age of 83.

      Reply
  9. Monkey’s Uncle

    4 months ago

    Just so you know, Ippei… “over/under” means something a little different in prisons.

    4
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    • Baseballisthebest

      4 months ago

      He’s not going to prison. At least not the maximum security type. Federal minimum security facilities are like a dorm. Many have horse stables and other luxuries. One in Massachusetts has tennis and handball courts. An indoor basketball gym.

      The article here mentioned it and the LA papers expounded on the fact that Mizuhara will likely be deported rather than serve any more time.

      Japanese papers and news stations have covered this is excruciating detail. They have had 2 hour documentary style shows, plural, on the case. The consensus there is that Mizuhara is being a good soldier protecting the honor of his boss, will do his time, and come back to Japan and be taken care of out of the eyes of the US authorities. Very much in keeping with their cultural code of honor.

      2
      Reply
  10. Mr. McNasty

    4 months ago

    So Ohtani is going to pay himself back. Got it.

    5
    Reply
  11. 10centBeerNight

    4 months ago

    Wrapped up in a bow. Nice and neat

    2
    Reply
  12. tj13

    4 months ago

    Unless he gets shived in the clink this is the last post about Ippei for a while 🙁 I await this saga’s inevitable return in silence and humble deference to… somebody.

    Reply
    • Jobu's Rum

      4 months ago

      Undoubtedly, he will appeal the sentencing so I fear not.

      Reply
      • Baseballisthebest

        4 months ago

        He pleaded guilty.

        Reply
    • wreckage

      4 months ago

      There will be some sort of news reported and passed along here when he is deported back to Japan. It won’t be the end, but it shouldn’t be as loud.

      Reply
  13. HopefulTwinsFan

    4 months ago

    Surely these comments won’t be relevant to Ohtani and will be heartfelt and peaceful.

    4
    Reply
  14. Butter Biscuits

    4 months ago

    Will be pardoned by president Elon musk

    6
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    • gimbo

      4 months ago

      sounds more like a joke to me

      1
      Reply
  15. paddyo furnichuh

    4 months ago

    Out on a limb, but I don’t think that restitution is getting paid down in full.

    3
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    • wreckage

      4 months ago

      And what is his punishment for failure to pay the restitution?

      I wish I could find a way to earn 17M, from jail to pay restitution. I’d go to minimum security jail for 3 years if it taught me how to make 17M in 3 years. Get out don’t again, legally, and retire.

      Reply
  16. Django

    4 months ago

    Is there any credible evidence that Ohtani is guilty of any wrongdoing or is it just that the circumstances are suspicious? I haven’t followed it that closely but many here seem to think he’s a criminal.

    1
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    • VegasMoved

      4 months ago

      The latter. People are lazy and go with the more exciting story. The investigation pretty clearly shows Ohtani wasn’t involved.

      18
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    • fred-3

      4 months ago

      Not only was there no wrongdoing, he was a victim of identity theft.

      12
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      • ReyDay

        4 months ago

        How does bro not know that tens of millions are missing from his account though? Surely his interpreter wasn’t the only one who had access to his BA records/statements ?

        3
        Reply
        • fred-3

          4 months ago

          It’s probably easier to commit a white collar identity theft crime than it is to rob a bodega store. Digital forensic is still a 21st century concept. Look at that Jaguars employee that stole millions from the team… he did that for years and didn’t get caught until recently.

          3
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        • YankeesBleacherCreature

          4 months ago

          Cray, cray, right? His mother was handling his money in Japan. Then when he came over to the U.S., Ippei helped him open a domestic bank account. All of his Angels salary were deposited there. Ippei had full unauthorized access to that account so he could easily intercept notifications and e-statements. He also impersonated Ohtani over the phone many times.

          Ohtani didn’t even need to touch that money because of all the endorsement money he’s been receiving in a seperate account which his agent was handling. When Ohtani’s agency asked about the salary account, Ippei, on behalf of Ohtani, was acting shifty and told them not to worry about it.

          It’s all in the official indictment.

          8
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        • ReyDay

          4 months ago

          Yeah I don’t think anyone would argue it’s harder stealing with a pen vs a gun. But like with millions surely he has a financial advisor or someone handling the finances unless that was part of the interpreter job description also. I just don’t see how you have no checks and balances as the face or MLB with tens of millions coming in yearly.

          Reply
        • YankeesBleacherCreature

          4 months ago

          Interpreters in Japan often act as personal assistants as well. So nobody in Japan is as shocked as we were to learn that one can have such access. Ohtani’s mother had been dealing with his finances since he was a young ballplayer.

          4
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        • fred-3

          4 months ago

          You’re answering your own inquires. If the interpreter knew Ohtani didn’t have a financial advisor then he knew it would be easier to steal from him. Ohtani not from here, so I wouldn’t assume he has the same set up as most American athletes do.

          4
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        • ReyDay

          4 months ago

          While he’s not from here, he’s also not new to the states he’s been playing here for years so that shouldn’t be an excuse. This is a tale as old as times of people mooching off star athletes. The NFL is huge on that with rookies coming into the league. It makes no sense to have an interpreter who I’m assuming doesn’t have a financial background handling the money aspect. Family is one thing, but a non family member whose background isn’t in the financial sector is ludicrous.

          Reply
        • YankeesBleacherCreature

          4 months ago

          Ohtani did consider him “family”. Ohtani and his current-wife intermingled with Ippei and his wife. Ippei once asked Ohtani for some money to do “dental work” so he cut him a $60K check. The POS then deposited the check presumably to gamble and also transferred out separately $60K from Ohtani’s account. He had it good as far as having a loyal, generous friend and a stable career but ultimately fucced it up royally.

          1
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        • ReyDay

          4 months ago

          @Yankee I’m sure they were like “family” but just cause they were close doesn’t mean there shouldn’t have been another balance at the other end to make sure all was kosher. It’s always the ones closest that cut the deepest, a financial institution should have been on watch for these type of situations. I know I can’t be the only one to think this. I’m not blaming Ohtani, it’s more the people and organization around him that failed.

          Reply
        • YankeesBleacherCreature

          4 months ago

          You really can blame Ohtani for his naivety and being so trustful. There’s only so much his other handlers can do when he his interpreter fully represents him. The only mistake his sports agency did make was not hiring an independent interpreter and insist on having a direct line to Ohtani. They won’t make that same mistake again.

          1
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        • depletion

          4 months ago

          As is the case with other athletes and musicians who get ripped off: they’re jocks. From the time they were 12 their life has revolved around hitting, throwing and running. A large number of incredibly successful musicians got badly burned by financial advisors.

          Reply
        • Niekro floater

          4 months ago

          Had complete n utter reliance on his interpeter navigating in a country where he didn’t know the language. Shohei probably couldn’t even order food w/o Ippei’s help. Then dude acts like he’s your buddy after 6 yrs together. It’s easy to see how Ohtani got taken advantage of, valuable Life lesson on trust.

          1
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        • YankeesBleacherCreature

          4 months ago

          Dude just wants to play baseball and whip out his no cap AMEX Black card at will. Y’all can worry about everything else. It’s worked for him his whole life until it didn’t.

          1
          Reply
        • ReyDay

          4 months ago

          That’s kind of my point though, his interpreter having full authority and power it’s like that old saying goes, absolute power corrupts absolutely or something like that.

          Reply
        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          History is rife with people entrusted to protect other’s assets doing just the opposite. There’s literally thousands, probably tens of thousands, that violated a trust. and took advantage of a situation. Ohtani apparently was looser with his security than most, but that just might speak to his trust in his friend and faith in people.

          1
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    • Bivouac-Sal

      4 months ago

      @Django
      As if any of them have one shred of actual evidence Ohtani is guilty of anything.

      1
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    • 2012orioles

      4 months ago

      When the story first broke, a spokesman for Ohtani said that ohtani transferred the funds to cover up the debt from ippei, which would get him in trouble. Then all of a sudden the story switched to the money was stolen. I find it difficult to believe he had no clue what was going on. Was he just covering the debt for his friends illegal gambling? Was he gambling himself? I can’t say for sure, but I don’t believe he had no idea what was happening.

      5
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      • Bivouac-Sal

        4 months ago

        @orioles
        the initial amount in question was peanuts compared to what was eventually uncovered.

        1
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      • sheagoodbye

        4 months ago

        “Later, Ohtani’s camp claims this all happened after the player’s handlers spoke with him while relying on Mizuhara to interpret. Ohtani supposedly remained in the dark about the situation.”

        sports.yahoo.com/shohei-ohtani-interpreter-scandal…

        1
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      • YankeesBleacherCreature

        4 months ago

        Ippei gave two different versions of the story over two days so that may cause some confusion. The first one was before he had personally spoken with Ohtani.

        Reply
    • Jean Matrac

      4 months ago

      There is no credible evidence that Ohtani wasn’t merely the victim here. People will believe what the want to, despite evidence to the contrary. Plus the accusations are fueled by dislike of the Dodgers, what, and how they’re paying him, and Ohtani as well, for choosing to go to LA.

      The circumstances were initially suspicious. So much so that I was willing to believe that Ohtani was involved in the gambling. But multiple investigations indicate he was the victim of theft. Ohtani was foolish in his trust of Mizuhara, which also makes people suspicious, but it wouldn’t be the first time someone lost money because they foolishly trusted someone.

      I can understand the skepticism about the MLB investigation, but the IRS, DOJ, and local law agencies aren’t covering a crime to protect MLB. And with a sentence of nearly 5 years, there was no going easy on Mizuhara. Any conspiracy theory in that regard falls apart.

      11
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      • Bivouac-Sal

        4 months ago

        Thank you Jean. Not that the haters will accept your well written post.

        1
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      • sheagoodbye

        4 months ago

        Well said. I too was a little skeptical initially, but everything that has come out since them either points to his innocence or doesn’t further the claim of his guilt.

        Some people are way too trusting. Actually, a lot of people are. That’s why, for instance, so many children end up getting abused by someone the family knows. Not a great leap of faith to believe that someone like Ohtani could be fooled if he was naïve enough to not have proper safeguards in place. He’s human just like the rest of us.

        3
        Reply
        • Bivouac-Sal

          4 months ago

          @shea
          well Ohtani is human but not quite like the rest of us.

          1
          Reply
        • YankeesBleacherCreature

          4 months ago

          @sheagoodbye When was the last time you counted your change jar? You don’t. If your wife, kids, brothers, or sisters do, you believe them. That was what his Angels salary bank account was.

          Reply
        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          “Ohtani is human but not quite like the rest of us.”

          So true, excellent point.

          1
          Reply
    • sheagoodbye

      4 months ago

      No.

      Is there always a small chance there was some sort of grand coverup up here? Sure, I guess. Wouldn’t be the first time in history something similar came to light. And not all conspiracy theories turn out to be false.

      Is that even remotely likely given the facts we know of, there being no concrete evidence against Ohtani, and the lack of even circumstantial evidence implicating him beyond “How could he not have known?”. No. Just take a look at the world around us; hell, take a look at many of the folks commenting here. I find Occam’s Razor tends to explain everything 99% of the time.

      The problem with conspiracy theorists is they believe whatever they want to believe regardless of the probability of a theory being true. To them, it’s simply another means to an end: the belief they are smarter than everyone else and a part of the exclusive “in” club. Just a different form a lack of critical thinking can take.

      7
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      • Rexhudler86

        4 months ago

        @shea. Not really because they said ippei didn’t bet on baseball. If ohtani was knowingly helping him bet off shore he would be fined a undisclosed amount. That’s the only other example .i don’t think there is anything to cover up. Just feel like ohtani didn’t know initially how bad it was, because he was paying for medical bills and bought him a Porsche. So when asked if he was giving him money he said yes didn’t know he was impersonating him and pulling money out.

        2
        Reply
      • depletion

        4 months ago

        This is one of the better descriptions of the mindset behind these idiotic conspiracy theories, Fox -$750M for example, that I have read. Thanks, sheagoodbye.

        Reply
      • depletion

        4 months ago

        I liked the use of the word “technically”:
        ‘“Technically I did steal from him,” one message read’

        Reply
    • stymeedone

      4 months ago

      The part that is suspicious is that many of the conversations between the two were private, and other than public statements after the fact, we will never know the “real” relationship between the two when it comes to gambling. It may be exactly as their public statements say. It just seems incredibly convenient for Ohtani.

      Reply
  17. D2323

    4 months ago

    free the homie

    1
    Reply
  18. BigBopper

    4 months ago

    Circumstances are suspicious. Was the sentenced in court? Id like to see him reporting.

    1
    Reply
  19. Reynaldo's

    4 months ago

    Bold move to leave comments open

    3
    Reply
    • sheagoodbye

      4 months ago

      I think it’s great they’ve been left open. Makes it easier to spot and mute the crazies.

      5
      Reply
  20. rhandome

    4 months ago

    This news brought to you by DraftKings. Catch tonight’s broadcast on the Fanduel Sports Network for more. Now here’s tonight’s point spreads, but first, a word from our sponsors…

    Hi, this is Shaq for BetMGM, and

    7
    Reply
  21. Easy as 1 2 3

    4 months ago

    2.5 years? That’s it? Something smelly dodgey here.

    Up next on mlbtrs: here’s how to feel about ippei’s sentencing.

    1
    Reply
    • Bivouac-Sal

      4 months ago

      try doing the math again Easy.
      It’s 4 years and 9 months

      1
      Reply
      • Rexhudler86

        4 months ago

        I often forget about 12 months being in a year too.

        Reply
        • Bivouac-Sal

          4 months ago

          well there are no games that count for almost 4 months so that’s understandable.

          Reply
        • Rexhudler86

          4 months ago

          @bivouac. I was saying most of these jokers with the conspiracy theories can’t read or count. Plus if ippei didn’t bet on baseball. ohtani could’ve given him the money and it wouldn’t get him suspended. Just a fine. Back to the theory he didn’t notice. Probably has multiple accounts maybe ippei opened a side account with 20 million in it. That he was draining.

          1
          Reply
    • HiredGun23

      4 months ago

      Ohtani to Ippei:
      “I’m not mad, I’m proud of you. You took your first pinch like a man and you learn two great things in your life. Look at me, never rat on your friends and always keep your mouth shut.”

      1
      Reply
  22. THEY LIVE!!!

    4 months ago

    Ippei did not kill himself!!!

    5
    Reply
  23. 2012orioles

    4 months ago

    The initial response from Ohtani was that he was covering illegal gambling debts from Ippei. His lawyers told him to retract that statement and came out with the story that the money was stolen. He for sure at minimum knew what was going on

    9
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    • Bivouac-Sal

      4 months ago

      wrong. read the court papers.

      3
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      • 2012orioles

        4 months ago

        Why would he say otherwise? Where can I see court docs? I don’t think it’s as wild as people act to think he knew or that mlb would want to cover for him.

        1
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        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          Mizuhara asked Ohtani for money to cover gambling losses. To my knowledge the gambling wasn’t illegal. Also, that amount was fairly small. Since Ohtani considered Mizuhara a friend, he gave it to him. That was before he knew that Mizuhara had been stealing millions from him. MLB might want to cover for him, I think that’s doubtful myself, but the IRS and DOJ, which also investigated, aren’t going to cover for him.

          1
          Reply
        • 2012orioles

          4 months ago

          I wouldn’t put it past the government to be dishonest. Regardless, I appreciate a comment without acting smarter than everyone like most of these discussions

          1
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        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          I want to correct an error in what I wrote. It was not legal gambling. it was with a bookie with an illegal sports book. The rest of what I wrote is true though.

          Reply
        • Bivouac-Sal

          4 months ago

          @orioles
          the indictment is here. but we should find the trial docs which I haven’t yet. google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j…

          Reply
        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          I agree somewhat. I don’t believe government to be dishonest, though I think there are some people in government that can be.

          But one thing government is really bad at is keeping secrets. I can’t believe that the IRS and DOJ would conspire together, and risk being exposed as part of a cover up of Ohtani. What’s the risk/reward on that equation?

          Reply
        • orange2001

          4 months ago

          @Jean Matrac I wouldn’t call $4.5M a “fairly small” amount.

          Below from ESPN:

          “I just told him I need to send a wire to pay off the debt,” Mizuhara says. “He didn’t ask if it was illegal, didn’t question me about that.”

          Mizuhara says that, after Ohtani agreed to pay the debts, the two of them logged into Ohtani’s bank account on Ohtani’s computer and sent eight or nine transactions, each at $500,000, over several months. They added “loan” to the description field in the transactions. Mizuhara estimates the final payment was made in October.

          Mizuhara declines to tell ESPN the full amount he lost gambling but confirms it’s at least $4.5 million.

          1
          Reply
        • Hammerin' Hank

          4 months ago

          He doesn’t believe government to be dishonest. Lol!!

          Reply
        • Baseballisthebest

          4 months ago

          The gambling was illegal in California.

          Reply
  24. James Midway

    4 months ago

    I bet he doesn’t get out early.

    Reply
    • YankeesBleacherCreature

      4 months ago

      It’s a federal sentence and max time off one can earn is 54 days off per year.

      1
      Reply
      • casualfan

        4 months ago

        So did you know this because you are a lawyer? Search for this info? Or was this information you came by from personal experience :-), I kid on that last one….

        Reply
        • YankeesBleacherCreature

          4 months ago

          You’re half-right. Lol. Not a lawyer. I looked it up. I’ve read most of John Grisham’s legal thriller novels. I’ve also had past acquaintances which have gone to federal prison and I followed some of their cases. There’s one that I know of that is now being sued by the NYS Attorney General. No doubt a criminal indictment will ensue once the state can get their money. So what does that say about me??

          Reply
        • DroppedThirdStrike

          4 months ago

          But you did stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night.

          1
          Reply
    • Baseballisthebest

      4 months ago

      I bet he doesn’t spend a day over time served and then is deported.

      1
      Reply
  25. doss44

    4 months ago

    Hopefully Ohtani get caught before the 10 years contract. Someday we will watch a documentary of how he escaped from this and how the MLB was part of this plan to avoid the suspension of the money maker of the league. (Thank you MLB Trade Rumors for the free speech).

    3
    Reply
    • Bivouac-Sal

      4 months ago

      so that is actual picture of your actual head doss. that makes sense.

      Reply
      • doss44

        4 months ago

        Yes, it is.

        2
        Reply
  26. restingmitchface

    4 months ago

    Reading these comments, I’m convinced that one of MLB’s biggest problems is that your average American MLB fan is probably not much fun to be around.

    I haven’t come across any posts wishing Ohtani harm (yet), so at least there’s that.

    5
    Reply
    • Bivouac-Sal

      4 months ago

      @resting
      I prefer to believe the group posting here is not representative of average American MLB fan let alone the average American.

      6
      Reply
      • sheagoodbye

        4 months ago

        Agreed. Although intelligence-wise it may be pretty spot on.

        3
        Reply
      • GilbertLAD

        4 months ago

        Exactly. Not every MLB fan is an incel.

        3
        Reply
      • MuleorAstroMule

        4 months ago

        If it were there would be open brawling in the streets.

        1
        Reply
      • restingmitchface

        4 months ago

        I prefer to believe that, too. Thank you for throwing me that lifeline of positivity.

        1
        Reply
    • YankeesBleacherCreature

      4 months ago

      Go on any social media platform and each will have their toxic subset of loud users. Most fans, even of opposing teams, I’ve encountered in real life are pretty cool. I spend time in Boston and wear my Yankees cap at Fenway Park most of the time. I’ve never felt threatened there except for some harmless trash talking.

      1
      Reply
  27. E.D Murray

    4 months ago

    Will he use his Ohtani voice for his 1 phone call?

    1
    Reply
  28. top jimmy

    4 months ago

    There’s no way he’s ever going to be able to pay that restitution amount.

    Reply
    • omar salazar

      4 months ago

      movie deal

      Reply
      • Baseballisthebest

        4 months ago

        Book deal too. But both have to wait until he is back in Japan.

        Reply
  29. Captainmike1

    4 months ago

    I bet we never find out the complete truth

    2
    Reply
    • DroppedThirdStrike

      4 months ago

      I bet we already have and it just doesn’t have the lurid content to satisfy you.

      1
      Reply
  30. GilbertLAD

    4 months ago

    The tin foil crowd is triggered. FYF

    1
    Reply
  31. johncoltrane

    4 months ago

    Absolute farce joke circus
    Investigators even admitted mizu never placed a bet in his life
    Ohtani doesnt just lose $17mil without noticing
    Banks dont just let you wire that much $
    This entire saga is horrible
    So much corruption & lies
    Mizu takes the fall
    Instead of shohei

    8
    Reply
    • johncoltrane

      4 months ago

      When mizu gets out of prison i have no doubt shohei will be there holding a suitcase with the first yr of his deferred $ in it

      2
      Reply
    • Jean Matrac

      4 months ago

      “Investigators even admitted mizu never placed a bet in his life”

      Not true. Please provide a link if you can back that up.

      “Ohtani doesnt just lose $17mil without noticing”

      Well, yes he did eventually. That’s how Mizuhara got caught.

      “Banks dont just let you wire that much $”

      Yes they do. How do you think huge transactions, like buying a sports team, or an office building happen. Oh sorry, we won’t let you transfer that money you’re using to buy that yacht, because it’s against the rules. Really?

      There’s mountains of evidence, and a confession that Mizuhara embezzled the money, and zero evidence that Ohtani had anything to do with the gambling the money was used for. And yet, you want Ohtani punished and to let Mizuhara walk.

      2
      Reply
      • johncoltrane

        4 months ago

        Mizu was not caught
        The bookie was on fbi most wanted list
        They went thru his records & saw ohtani name. Mizuhara name is nowhere in the bookies records. Just google it man, it was like a week ago federal investigators said mizu has never placed a bet ever in his life. I actually have made 2 large transactions in my life and both times i had to be in bank in person with driv lic & passport & answer security Q. There is no way on earth, ON EARTH , that a bank will allow $17 mil transfer from the account of the worlds most well know Athlete. Ohtani asked his friend to take the fall. With good behavior he’ll be out in 2 yrs and then he’ll live in fiji courtesy of shohei for the rest of his life
        Im aware if a dime is missing in my acct
        Shohei didnt notice $17mill??? F that guy deserves lifetime ban & jailtime

        5
        Reply
        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          Maybe you should google it. This from the NY times:

          “Mizuhara…was fired earlier this week after the revelation that he was making bets with an illegal bookie in California…”

          This from ESPN:

          “Mizuhara, detailed to ESPN how he started betting with a bookmaker and accrued millions of dollars of debt.”

          This from the LA Times:

          “Mizuhara, agreed last month to plead guilty to charges for operating an unlawful gambling business, money laundering and subscribing to a false tax return.”

          Mizuhara paying gambling debts out of Ohtani’s bank account in no way means he never placed a bet. That’s a ridiculous conclusion. Again, provide a link that says federal investigators said Mizuhara never placed a bet ever in his life.

          Unless you’re a multimillionaire your experience with money transfers are not comparable. And it wasn’t $17M all at once. The transfers happened between 2021 and 2024.

          And just ignore that the IRS and DOJ also investigated, and came to the same conclusions that MLB did. No way would the feds do that. Since it’s very hard to keep anything secret when more than 2 people know about it, no way would the Feds risk being exposed in a cover up of Ohtani. The theory of this conspiracy is based on absurd assumptions.

          2
          Reply
      • Fred McGriff HR

        4 months ago

        @Jean Matrac

        ““Banks dont just let you wire that much $”

        Yes they do. How do you think huge transactions, like buying a sports team, or an office building happen. Oh sorry, we won’t let you transfer that money you’re using to buy that yacht, because it’s against the rules.”
        ————————————————————————
        This is factually incorrect, all banks have their own rules for wire transfers, and when it comes to significant multi million dollar transfers `there would still need to be some type of authorisation factor in place.

        Banks have limits on wire transfers, so you are patently wrong.

        Types of transfers; limitations on frequency or dollar amount. Limitations on the frequency and dollar amount of transfers generally must be disclosed in detail.
        You can go and look at individual banks terms & conditions and go and look at the EFTA Electronic Funds Transfer Act.

        2
        Reply
        • Jean Matrac

          4 months ago

          They do have limits, I agree. but clearly Mizuhara was able to make the transfers that resulted in a $17M theft. That was the point.

          What I was responding to was the claim that it was impossible to wire that much money, like it was done in one large sum. I did search a little about money transfers.

          And wire transfers can range from $100,000 per day for individuals to higher limits for businesses.

          ACH transfers daily limits can range from $1,000 to $25,000 per day.

          Bank of America has a $1,000 daily transaction limit, but may lift it for Safe Pass program members

          HSBC allows transfers of $10–$50,000 per day

          The point was that denying Mizuhara is guilty because of the limits on money transfers is what is patently incorrect.

          Reply
        • DroppedThirdStrike

          4 months ago

          I’ve wired money for large corporations and we could do international wire transfers with repeat codes that allowed us to send to the same accounts over and over. It’s done over the phone, subject to verification, and confirmed by email. They are all subject to reporting laws.

          Make the same transfers enough times and they bypass federal security checks and can be approved by both banks involved.

          Happens daily by companies all the time

          1
          Reply
        • Fred McGriff HR

          4 months ago

          Dropped Third Strike, safe at first

          All good, I am aware of this. All individuals(personal accounts single or joint) and entities, businesses, companies, corporations, will have different protocols and authorities for their accounts and authorisation methods in place for EFT or wire transfers domestic/international, hence, why some employees are able to circumvent the system and commit fraud or steal from their employers. Some businesses will also have dual authorisation as a method of authorising a payment as an example, or have limits for who can authorise payments depending on amounts.

          Reply
  32. hersch

    4 months ago

    Ahh now the story is complete. I couldn’t understand the whole 90% of salary being deferred when a player could easily invest and outearn the difference in taxes between districts/countries. Well done dodgers. Well done Ohtani. Well done MLB. All wrapped up with a bow.

    2
    Reply
  33. TheFuzzofKing

    4 months ago

    Ohtani next.

    2
    Reply
  34. Mlbfan78

    4 months ago

    I’m honestly surprised that Mizuhara doesn’t try to get to serve his sentence in Japan, as prisons over there are nothing like American prisons, time served is time served and the US will save money on not housing him paying for medical care etc and since they going to deport him anyway it could be a legit option.

    Reply
    • YankeesBleacherCreature

      4 months ago

      This is just conjecture but Ohtani is kind of seen as a national treasure in Japan including its prisons. Honor is a central concept in Japanese culture. He may think twice about serving his time there but that’s not up to him.

      Reply
    • Niekro floater

      4 months ago

      Ippei is American, they’ll deport em to Orange Co.

      Reply
      • YankeesBleacherCreature

        4 months ago

        He’s not an U.S. citizen.

        1
        Reply
        • Niekro floater

          4 months ago

          My bad. He grew up in Diamond Bar, CA but u are right born in Hokkaido. Family moved when he was 7.

          1
          Reply
        • Fred McGriff HR

          4 months ago

          Permanent resident, not a US citizen.

          1
          Reply
  35. Rally Goose

    4 months ago

    “You’re the fall guy, Ippei. You’re the guy they come to when no one else will stand up and take their medicine. And they come to you because you never make them stand up and take it.”

    3
    Reply
  36. Rays in the Bay

    4 months ago

    Ohtani must be really happy about that.

    1
    Reply
  37. Old York

    4 months ago

    Justice system still works in this country. Punishes the baddies and rewards the goodies.

    Reply
  38. SkenesandSlopes

    4 months ago

    Amazing that while the investigation started in late-2023 that Ohtani found the time to get married in early 2024.

    Reply
  39. stymeedone

    4 months ago

    Yoan Moncada has a bad rep. He lingered on the IL and was part of the problem on the south side. I’m surprised he got a major league deal. At least their two third baseman can keep each other company on the IL. I wonder if TA recommended him?

    1
    Reply
  40. Airo13

    4 months ago

    How the hell he going to make $17 million from jail?

    Reply
    • Airo13

      4 months ago

      Oh my bad. I read it as 57 years at first lol.

      Reply
  41. Niekro floater

    4 months ago

    3 to 1 odds he gets out early.

    1
    Reply
  42. outinleftfield

    4 months ago

    So he took the fall for Ohtani, will serve no jail time because he is being deported, and since he will no longer under US custody will not have to pay Ohtani back anything? Do I have that right?

    If you think that someone can pretend to be someone else and get access to make $500k wire transfers, I have a bridge I would like to sell you.

    I hope that Ohtani at least learned his lesson and stopped gambling. It cost his friend the ability to come to the US.

    6
    Reply
  43. zappaforprez

    4 months ago

    Ohtani did it.

    4
    Reply
    • gimbo

      4 months ago

      prove it

      Reply
      • zappaforprez

        4 months ago

        I don’t have to when the most elementary of common sense exists.

        1
        Reply
        • Casey "Cash" Considerations

          4 months ago

          Me when i’m an idiot:

          Reply
        • gimbo

          4 months ago

          I’ll admit I haven’t read too much into this but hasn’t everyone said ippei did it? That seems like enough evidence to me. Also, don’t say he was paid to be a fall guy, with the amount of people who would have to be in on that it would be basically impossible to orchestrate.

          1
          Reply
        • JoeBrady

          4 months ago

          Other impossibilities include:

          Ohtani doesn’t open up his bank statements for 26 months.

          Ohtani’s finance team takes Ippie’s word that Ohtani doesn’t want anyone looking at the account.

          Ohtani’s finance team arranges a meeting with Ohtani and Ippie, and Ippie shows up alone and says Ohtani was sick.

          Someone with ~ $250k a year in income gets a $16M line of credit with a bookie.

          The bookie saying “BOOKMAKER 1 responded, “Yes, but that’s all bulls***. Obviously you didn’t steal from him. I understand it’s a cover job I totally get it.”

          I could go on and on, but this stuff doesn’t happen in real life.

          1
          Reply
  44. A's Fan

    4 months ago

    Sentence seems light

    Reply
    • Jean Matrac

      4 months ago

      It’s not. It’s within the guidelines, if a bit on the tougher side. This is non-violent, white-collar crime, which tends to get lighter sentences.

      Reply
  45. Fred McGriff HR

    4 months ago

    “there will be three years of supervised release and Mizuhara has been ordered to pay Ohtani nearly $17MM in restitution.”
    ———————————————————

    I am intrigued as to how Ippei will pay Shohei $17M.

    1
    Reply
    • YankeesBleacherCreature

      4 months ago

      He won’t be able to entirely or even make a dent. They start by taking some money out of his earned money from his prison account for the commissary. Then wage garnishment once he’s out. Future tax returns refunds, etc. He’s screwed.

      justice.gov/criminal/criminal-vns/restitution-proc…

      Reply
      • Niekro floater

        4 months ago

        Plus good luck getn job @least as interpeter. He does have sad life ahead of em n he’s probably still addicted to gambling. It’s terrible disease, they play to lose not to win.

        1
        Reply
        • YankeesBleacherCreature

          4 months ago

          Research has shown that it’s the worst addiction one can have over substance abuse addictions.

          Reply
  46. JoeW 2

    4 months ago

    fall guy took the medicine..

    6
    Reply
  47. CTYanksFan

    4 months ago

    So he stole 16 million from Ohtani with no one noticing. I know Ohtani has a lot of money, but give me a break. I am by no means a conspiracy theorist, but this is a massive cover-up. He has law firms and accounting firms overseeing his money, and we are supposed to believe that 16 mil went missing unnoticed?

    6
    Reply
    • Jean Matrac

      4 months ago

      “He has law firms and accounting firms overseeing his money…”

      And you know this how? Everything I’ve read suggests otherwise. All his endorsement money went into a different account that was handled by his agent. Mizuhara set up the bank account for Ohtani that he stole from.

      Read my post above about Melissa King who stole $42M from a NYC union. It’s far more unbelievable that she got away with that for 6 years than Mizuhara got away with it for 3 years.

      A massive coverup would involve the IRS and DOJ. Do you really believe the Feds would be complicit? What could possibly be the benefit to them doing that? And the risk, should it come out later that they conspired to cover it up is enormous. Try using some logic. A cover up by MLB, maybe, but a cover up by the Feds makes no sense.

      3
      Reply
      • BlueSkies_LA

        4 months ago

        Yes, his agency requested oversight on his U.S. bank account and was told that Ohtani wanted it to remain private. The person who told them this was Mizuhara. The reason Mizuhara told them this was he was siphoning money out of it to pay for his gambling. He set up an elaborate scheme to impersonate Ohtani to his bank.

        The blow-by-blow detail of this financial fraud and how it was committed is found in the charging document. The conspiracy theorists won’t read it, and if they do, won’t believe a single word of it. They are demented, I’m sorry to say. There’s a whole lot of it about these days.

        Baseball fans, at least, should know that Ohtani is a baseball cyborg. Other than his wife and his dog, he lives and breathes baseball. In Japan, he was known as a baseball monk. He is not interested in living a lavish lifestyle here, either. Being all about baseball is how he will live for the entire time he is a player. This is one of the reasons he is so good. He wants to be the best. He works at it.

        But of course he works so hard at being good at this game that the demented among us assume he must really be very, very bad. They will go through any sort of contortion to “prove” this to themselves. This is their problem. Perhaps they should meditate on this for a while, and maybe they can still save their brains going completely to mush. Few will. They’d prefer to think everyone is just as cynical as they are.

        2
        Reply
        • JoeBrady

          4 months ago

          The person who told them this was Mizuhara.
          =====================
          Way too many holes.

          1-If I were Ohtani’s accountant, I’d ask why what might be his main account was off-limits. If this was $200k, then fine. But $16M requires an explanation.

          2-Unless Ippie has a power-of-attorney, then nothing he says matters. If I was your accountant, your limo driver doesn’t tell me what accounts I have access to. You do, and this is handled by contract.

          3-When did the accounts become off-limits? If Ippie only started stealing 26 months ago, why would he have put these accounts off-limits in 2017-18, when Ohtani first started getting paid. Or if Ippie decided 26 months ago to start dipping, did he show up suddenly and tell the accountant to stop reviewing the account, without clearing it thru Ohtani?

          There is not one common sense thing in this entire episode.

          Reply
        • BlueSkies_LA

          4 months ago

          You are delusional. The sad part is, you have lots of company.

          2
          Reply
        • JoeBrady

          4 months ago

          And we are right. There is almost no doubt about it.

          Reply
        • BlueSkies_LA

          4 months ago

          delusional | dəˈlo͞oZH(ə)nəl |
          adjective
          characterized by or holding false beliefs or judgments about external reality that are held despite incontrovertible evidence to the contrary, as a symptom of serious mental illness:

          2
          Reply
    • outinleftfield

      4 months ago

      Especially since it was supposedly only from his earnings with the Angels and those totaled less than $10 million when this was supposedly going on. Hard to steal $16 million from an account that only had $10 million minus taxes and agency fees put into it.

      Reply
      • BlueSkies_LA

        4 months ago

        Finally, Ohtani’s CPA joins the chat.

        He made over $40M playing for the Angels.

        BTW, you’re fired.

        1
        Reply
  48. gold masters

    4 months ago

    Sho lie ohtani
    Talk about a weak story line

    2
    Reply
  49. TheOtherMikeD

    4 months ago

    Ohtani sentenced to 10 years with the Dodgers.

    Reply
  50. Mercenary.Freddie.Freeman

    4 months ago

    Fall guy for Ohtani Rose. Biggest scam in MLB in 30 years. Shame on Manfred and MLB for sweeping this all under the rug. It really is unbelievable.

    3
    Reply
    • Hammerin' Hank

      4 months ago

      What’s unbelievable is the amount of gullible souls in here who believe this highly questionable story. They just throw that conspiracy word around and think that justifies their position.

      1
      Reply
      • DroppedThirdStrike

        4 months ago

        Shohei, Ippei, MLB, IRS, and DOJ have made their positions clear. If you’ve got a different position and ANYTHING to back it up we’d all love to hear it.

        Otherwise it is a conspiracy and the position is 100% justified.

        1
        Reply
  51. CC Ryder

    4 months ago

    An umpire shares an account with someone who gambles on baseball and he’s fired because the commissioner said there’s a hint of impropriety. When a star baseball player does the same thing well we know how it turned out

    1
    Reply
  52. christaylormvp

    4 months ago

    Shohei: “Ippei did it.”
    Ippei: “I did it.”
    Feds: “Ippei did it.”
    Judge: “Ippei did it.”
    Mountains of evidence: “Ippei did it.”
    Bookie: “Ippei did it.”
    This comment section: “But has anyone considered the fact that I don’t like Shohei and have the IQ of a flip flop?”

    3
    Reply
    • Darth Alru

      4 months ago

      Some people are incredibly stupid. You can’t do anything about that.

      2
      Reply
    • outinleftfield

      4 months ago

      Shohei: I lent him the money.
      Shohei’s attorneys: You can’t say that because then you are admitting to wire fraud
      Shohei: Ippei did it

      Reply
      • JoeBrady

        4 months ago

        If I read everything correctly, both Ippie and Ohtani’s spokesperson said this. So either the spokesperson said it without talking to Ohtani, or he was told to recant because of the gift tax issues this creates.

        This is just one of a dozen inconsistencies.

        1
        Reply
  53. drilliams88

    4 months ago

    Bro isn’t sweatin’ it. Ohtani has him set for life. #fallguy

    1
    Reply
  54. MrPeanutHead

    4 months ago

    “If you don’t believe the official story you must be stupid” Ok bootlickers. No reason MLB would want to keep Ohtani clean.

    1
    Reply
    • roykirk1

      4 months ago

      If that’s your stance, you ARE stupid. I don’t use that insulting word lightly. Basically, you are saying the IRS, the FBI, the various banking agencies, etc. are ALL in on it. And of the hundreds if not thousands of people that would need to be in on it to pull it off… NONE have leaked anything. WTF bro? When a team is THINKING about trading for another player, it somehow gets reported on ESPN an hour later, but YOU think a coverup of this magnitude is happening right now? Show us some evidence then.

      4
      Reply
      • gimbo

        4 months ago

        evidence please

        1
        Reply
      • Casey "Cash" Considerations

        4 months ago

        Conspiracy odds to be true = 1/(number of conspirators). Imagine how many regular people would have to be putting their careers and lives at stake to protect a FOREIGN NATIONAL.

        2
        Reply
  55. gimbo

    4 months ago

    I’m glad he finally got sentenced, maybe this will finally shut up all the idiots who think this was a massive coverup and not just ippei stealing from ohtani

    1
    Reply
    • gimbo

      4 months ago

      reading comments now and apparently this is not the case

      2
      Reply
    • gimbo

      4 months ago

      still haven’t proven your theory

      1
      Reply
    • DroppedThirdStrike

      4 months ago

      When all the relevant authorities and everyone who bothers to read the evidence and everyone with common sense all agree on something and then you come behind and, without even the tiniest bit of evidence, disagree with the rest of the known universe, it doesn’t make you in possession of secret knowledge or make you special, no matter what your mom told you.

      It just makes you wrong.

      So, to summarize, you’re wrong.

      1
      Reply
      • gimbo

        4 months ago

        Are you talking to me or the other guy? Because from what I can tell most people and authorities agree with me.

        Reply
      • DroppedThirdStrike

        4 months ago

        Other guy

        Reply
      • DroppedThirdStrike

        4 months ago

        Show me a fact then.
        Like your wife says, it’s not that hard.

        Reply
      • DroppedThirdStrike

        4 months ago

        So you got nothing. Thought so. Go sit in the corner

        Reply
  56. dpsmith22

    4 months ago

    I guess he stole Ohtani’s ID and other info too to create that bank account….another fine example of how dumb MLB thinks fans and the public are

    1
    Reply
    • Casey "Cash" Considerations

      4 months ago

      Mizu helped Ohtani set up his bank account when he came to the states. He has all of his information. Shame you never passed 1st grade, since reading the FBI report explains this.

      2
      Reply
  57. Chris from NJ

    4 months ago

    He’s going to the federal penitentiary correct? I believe that’s where he’s going and that’s a whole different ball game from State Prison or plain old county jail. He’ll be fine. It’s still jail don’t get me wrong some of them can be pretty rough but not the one he’s going to. He’ll be in the Lomax playing tennis most of the day. Granted they did hit him with a long sentence. But hey what can you do he picked the wrong athlete.

    Reply
    • BeeCarbo

      4 months ago

      Ippei practices enough in prison to be placed on the Japanese pickleball team.

      “Let’s play for a Michelob Ultra!”

      Reply
  58. Baseball’s Topics on Baseball Today

    4 months ago

    I like comments sections like this because it helps me efficiently figure out which troll need to be muted.

    1
    Reply
  59. BeeCarbo

    4 months ago

    Had there been a trial, Ohtani would have been called as a witness testifying under oath. Not sure the punishment for lying in a court case, but MLB dodged an Ippei “bullet” there.

    Reply
    • YankeesBleacherCreature

      4 months ago

      98% of federal criminal cases are resolved with a plea bargaining agreement. That means the fed gov’t is not going prosecute unless they have overwhelming supporting evidence that they can win a trial. This case like many others would’ve never gone to trial.

      Reply
  60. Dock_Elvis

    4 months ago

    Well, here we go again. Yeah, it’s wholly possible for a guy to have a billion dollar talent and a 50 naivety. But yeah it for sure atleast SEEMS the probability would be low that Ohtani didn’t know his best friend had a gambling issue.

    I’ll buy a Japanese accented man could call someone and front as another Japanese man.

    But I’ll also buy that with MLBs lack of integrity….that they’d never allow their meal ticket to go down in flames that easily.

    Of course gambling is the new issue in the game. But the money from it is greater than the risk for them.

    Reply
  61. Rick Face

    4 months ago

    During the interrogation he gave his name, rank and serial number. He will be well compensated upon release. Mark my words.

    Reply
  62. GilbertLAD

    4 months ago

    Time to mute all the conspiracy theorists.

    2
    Reply
    • gimbo

      4 months ago

      whenever I see someone saying it was a coverup I’m just going to mute them no questions asked

      2
      Reply
      • BoKnowsBonobos

        4 months ago

        That’s the premise of cover ups. Hoping no questions are asked. You’re the target market and proof of concept.

        Reply
    • gimbo

      4 months ago

      Before I mute you let me explain why. You disagree with me, and even if I think it’s dumb, you’re entitled to your opinion. However, it’s not worth my time to keep seeing it. No opinions will be changed, and it’s only going to make people angrier. I don’t want that, so I’m muting you. Hopefully you understand, but judging by your previous comments, I’m not sure.

      1
      Reply
  63. dave 2

    4 months ago

    Just need someone to explain to me how Ohtani and his accountant didn’t notice millions in transfers.

    Reply
  64. Captainmike1

    4 months ago

    I read he had negative winnings of 40 million dollars and placed an average bet of 13 thousand dollars

    He was a foo who kept thinking he would win when he was clearly incompetent as a gal bled

    And he was clearly a fool

    Reply
  65. The first

    4 months ago

    Hopefully he has time in prison to reflect on the crime he committed and rehabilitate and return to society and contribute in a meaningful way to humanity. If that can occur, the government’s cost of prosecution and incarceration will have been worth it.

    Reply
  66. BoKnowsBonobos

    4 months ago

    Didn’t the girls in the Bauer case agree that the sex was consensual and didn’t they have texts of the girls saying they wanted him to do what they were then accusing him of? Why didn’t those investigations stop at that point? MLB took two years to come to their findings and one month in the ohtani case. For a more apples to apples example, the umpire who was just fired by MLB, Pat Hoberg, took a year to investigate. He was essentially fired for keeping bad company. He never bet on baseball but his friend did. By all accounts, ohtani made a bad choice in friends and should pay the same price for bringing that guy into clubhouses throughout the league. I’m not saying there’s a big conspiracy where there’s a bunch of back alley handshake deals but once ippei confessed and took the fall everybody just accepted his word. An exceptional liar admits to lying so he must not be lying? All the texts and phone records in different languages and one month was the entirety of MLBs investigation? He’s been lying the whole time but now faced with prison he’s decided to come clean and we accept that and are moving on….I can see why the courts would do that because they don’t have an ethical and moral code to live up to so it’s a win and doesn’t waste any manpower. Ohtani should be on the same path as Bauer and Hoberg and isn’t and I don’t think there was any conspiracy between government and private agencies but I think there’s some hush money being passed around the commissioners office.

    Reply
    • DroppedThirdStrike

      4 months ago

      Or he just finally admitted to what everyone knew was happening and what all the mountains of evidence pointed to. Sometimes it’s not that involved

      Reply
  67. SF6sparky

    4 months ago

    Way to take one for your boss! I’m sure he’ll have a nice savings of 57 monthly payments for you when you’re out. Hang in there!

    1
    Reply
  68. 28rings

    4 months ago

    How much of it is deferred?

    Reply
  69. unpaidobserver

    4 months ago

    Id absolutely expect this in Japan but I expected our Justice system to at least make it work to completely evade the law

    Guess we live in a Japan style country, justice wise.

    Reply
  70. MLBTR needs to hire editors

    4 months ago

    “Meanwhile” has to start the sentence; it can’t come in the middle, separated by commas.

    Reply

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