Miami Herald

Two charged in Miami with crimes that hurt Ecuador’s police pensions

- Jay Weaver: 305-376-3446, @jayhweaver

A money-laundering trail totaling hundreds of millions of dollars has ended with corruption charges against a former Ecuadorian official and an investment manager once based in Miami.

John Luzuriaga Aguinaga, 52, was arrested Monday on charges of accepting about $1.4 million in bribes as the risk director of the Ecuadorian government’s police pension fund.

U.S. authoritie­s say Luzuriaga took the money from investment manager Jorge Cherrez Mino, an Ecuadorian who operated out of Panama and Miami. Cherrez, 46, who is believed to be in Mexico, is accused of pocketing at least $65 million from the scheme, which entailed the use of investment companies and banks in Latin America and South Florida, according to authoritie­s.

A pair of criminal complaints filed in Miami federal court say Cherrez’s investment­s, including bonds purchased by a Panamanian company, resulted in losses of $111 million to the Ecuadorian police retirement fund.

Luzuriaga, who served as the fund’s risk director and as a member of its investment fund committee between 2014 and 2019, expressed his gratitude to Cherrez for paying him the alleged bribes in exchange for the business. “Thank you for fixing my financial life and that of my family,” Luzuriaga said in a text message to Cherrez in December 2015.

Luzuriaga’s defense attorney, Tim Bower Rodriguez, said that after learning of the allegation­s, his client “voluntaril­y self-surrendere­d to federal law enforcemen­t.”

“John looks forward to his day in court,” Rodriguez said Tuesday.

Marlins pitcher Pablo Lopez had a breakout year during the shortened 2020 MLB season. He plans to add a new breaking ball to his arsenal this season.

As spring training for the 2020 season unfolded, Pablo Lopez began developing a cutter.

With spring training for the 2021 season now underway, Lopez is again tinkering with his arsenal. His four-seam fastball, sinker, cutter and changeup remain.

Now, he’s trying to add a breaking ball back into his repertoire that better fits his arm slot compared

to the curveball he had previously thrown to give

himself a steady fifth pitch as he prepares for his fourth big-league season.

“It can only help me,” Lopez explained Tuesday after throwing two shutout innings in his first spring training appearance at Roger Dean Chevrolet Stadium. “As a starting pitcher, your main focus is you have to go through the lineup three or hopefully four times, so the more good pitches you have that you feel comfortabl­e throwing in any count, the more unpredicta­ble you remain, which is a huge weapon. You don’t want to fall into patterns. You don’t want to become too predictabl­e.”

Lopez saw success on that front during the shortened 2020 season. During his 11 regularsea­son starts and 57 1⁄3 innings, he set career-best marks in ERA (3.61), walks and hits per inning (1.19), strikeouts per nine innings (9.26), hits allowed per nine innings (7.85) and home runs allowed per nine innings (0.63).

He had a pretty even split among his top three pitches, according to Statcast. Lopez threw his fourseam fastball 32.2 percent of the time, his changeup 29.9 percent of the time and sinker 22.5 percent. The cutter and curveball accounted for the remaining 15.4 percent.

Lopez now strives to show he can replicate those results over a full 162-game season, one in which he will be tasked with making as many as 32 starts during the regular season. Each of Lopez’s first two seasons in the majors ended early due to shoulder injuries.

But Lopez, who turns 25 on Sunday, said he is preparing as if he is going to throw 200 innings this year — almost double his single-season career high of 111 1⁄3.

“It’s gonna be different,” Lopez said. “You have to make sure that if what you did last year worked, you have to make sure that you’re doing a little bit more, or that you are more aware of how your body’s reacting, how your body’s feeling to more throwing, more games. You have to be aware of if you might need to take a day off . ... The goal is the same: 32 or more regular-season starts and then just keep it up, keep them going in the playoffs.”

Lopez projects to be near the top of the Marlins’ rotation with Sandy Alcantara. Elieser Hernandez and Sixto Sanchez are also expected to be part of the rotation with one of Trevor Rogers, Nick Neidert, Daniel Castano and Braxton Garrett getting the fifth spot to start the season.

Marlins manager Don Mattingly had noted several times that “everything kind of clicked together” for Lopez when the team returned for their second round of spring training following MLB’s threemonth shutdown due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. That carried over into the season, and Lopez stepped up as the Marlins’ de facto ace for half the regular season when Alcantara,

Caleb Smith and Jose Urena were among the group of players who tested positive for COVID-19 after the first weekend of the season.

What are the next steps in Lopez’s developmen­t?

“It’s going to be about consistenc­y now,” Mattingly said. “Continuing to improve, continuing to get better. His processes have always been good. He’s smart. He understand­s how studying and what he’s trying to do is just getting him to the point where he’s got everything put together.

“The improvemen­ts will look smaller,” Mattingly continued. “It was a big, big jump last year. I think now you’re going to see more the detailed things about his game just get better.”

 ?? MARK BROWN Getty Images ?? Pablo Lopez pitches two shutout innings Tuesday against the Cardinals in his first spring outing in Jupiter.
MARK BROWN Getty Images Pablo Lopez pitches two shutout innings Tuesday against the Cardinals in his first spring outing in Jupiter.

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