Albuquerque Journal

Cardinals fined, lose draft picks

MLB issues ruling in hacking case

- BY DERRICK GOOLD

ST. LOUIS — The illegal actions of a former St. Louis Cardinals executive that put him in prison will also cost the team draft picks and a punitive fine in one of the harshest penalties enforced by Major League Baseball in recent memory.

And the Houston Astros will directly benefit.

In a decision issued Monday afternoon by commission­er Rob Manfred, the Cardinals have been fined $2 million in damages — possibly the largest ever for one team — and their first two picks in the coming draft have been taken away as a result of an illegal hack into Houston’s database. The two picks, Nos. 56 and 75, will go to the Astros, as will the slot money assigned to those picks. The $2 million fine will also be paid to the Cardinals’ former division rivals.

A year ago, Chris Correa pleaded guilty to five counts of illegal entry into the Astros’ internal database, “Ground Control.” Correa was sentenced to 46 months in prison.

The commission­er’s decision also bans Correa from returning to baseball. He has been placed on the permanentl­y ineligible list, the same one that includes Pete Rose.

No other individual was punished in the decision.

The commission­er’s office did not find any other member of the Cardinals staff, present or for-

mer, who was a part of Correa’s actions. Though the commission­er, in his forthcomin­g decision, ruled that the Cardinals benefited from Correa’s actions and that the club, as a whole, was “liable for his misconduct.”

“We respect the commission­er’s decision and appreciate that there is now a final resolution to this matter,” Cardinals Chairman Bill DeWitt Jr. said in a statement issued by the team. “Commission­er Manfred’s findings are fully consistent with our own investigat­ion’s conclusion that this activity was isolated to a single individual.”

The Cardinals have 30 days to pay the fine.

As a result of signing free-agent Dexter Fowler, the Cardinals have already given up their earliest draft pick, No. 19. Before the penalties, the Cardinals had the secondsmal­lest draft bonus pool of the 30 teams, and Monday’s decision will nearly slice it in half. The Cardinals will lose the bonus allotment assigned to pick No. 56 ($1,122,400) and No. 75 ($730,800). That drops their total available bonus pool from $3,925,500 to $2,072,300. Houston’s draft pool will grow by the same amount as a result of being awarded the Cardinals picks.

 ??  ?? Chris Correa
Chris Correa

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States