The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

2 ex-white Sox ticket sellers plead guilty in scheme

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CHICAGO » Two former Chicago White Sox ticket sellers have pleaded guilty to federal charges for their roles in a scheme where thousands of tickets to the team’s games were fraudulent­ly sold.

James Costello, 67, and William O’neil, 51, each admitted their crimes during Tuesday hearings in federal court held by videoconfe­rence due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. Costello pleaded guilty to wire fraud, and

O’neil admitted he lied to the FBI, the Chicago Suntimes reported.

A third defendant, ticket broker Bruce Lee, still faces 11 counts of wire fraud and two counts of money laundering. His trial is scheduled for Jan. 25.

Costello and O’neil’s plea agreements anticipate the men will cooperate with prosecutor­s and that their sentencing hearings will be delayed until their cooperatio­n is complete.

An indictment made public in January alleged that Lee made $868,369 by fraudulent­ly selling 34,876 tickets during the 2016 through 2019 baseball seasons. It alleges that Costello and O’neil generated thousands of compliment­ary and discount tickets — without required vouchers — and gave them to Lee in exchange for cash.

Costello allegedly used other employees’ ID codes to avoid detection as he accessed White Sox Ticketmast­er

computers, and eventually recruited O’neil to help with the scheme, prosecutor­s said.

During Tuesday’s hearing, Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Schneider said Costello collected more than $100,000 from Lee. He said O’neil lied to FBI agents investigat­ing the scam in March 2019, telling them he’d never given tickets to Lee without the knowledge and consent of the White Sox.

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