National Post

Agent, trainer deny Cuban smuggling

- Curt Anderson

MIAMI •A Florida- based sports agent and a trainer ran legitimate businesses aimed at getting Cuban baseball players to sign U. S. major league contracts but were not involved with smuggling players from the communist island or falsifying travel documents, their lawyers told a federal jury Wednesday.

Agent Bartolo Hernandez and trainer Julio Estrada have been charged with conspiracy and alien smuggling. Both face lengthy prison sentences if convicted.

Prosecutor­s s ai d t he pair used shady boat captains, document forgers and phoney paperwork to get 20 players to the U. S. quickly so they could sign lucrative free-agent contracts totalling some US$ 150 million. Both stood to make millions of dollars from those contracts.

Hernandez attorney Jeffrey Marcus said the agent’s only involvemen­t with the players was to negotiate their contracts with profession­al teams through his company, Global Sports Management, and that his percentage was relatively small at less than five per cent.

“His business is baseball. It’s not smuggling,” Marcus told jurors. “This case, I think, is a stretch in many ways, in fact and in law.”

Likewise, Estrada lawyer Sabrina Puglisi said her client’s role was operating training facilities in Mexico and the Dominican Republic so players could stay sharp while they awaited permission to come to the U.S.

Under Major League Baseball rules, Cuban players who establish residency in a third country can sign lucrative deals with teams as free agents, but would have to submit to the baseball draft and get paid less if they come directly to the U.S.

“Julio has nothing to hide. He did everything above board. He’s running a legitimate business,” Puglisi said.

No players are accused of wrongdoing. Several Cubanborn players are likely to testify, including Yoenis Cespedes of the New York Mets, Jose Abreu of the Chicago White Sox and Adeiny Hechevarri­a of the Miami Marlins. Puglisi said more than 20 players were trained by Estrada.

Assistant U. S. Attorney Ron Davidson said in his opening s t atement t hat some players came to the U. S. with falsified passports or used other forms of deception to establish residency in Mexico and other countries. One tactic, he said, was to submit documents to the Mexican government claiming the players had actual jobs such as a welder, mechanic, even as an “area supervisor” for a jet ski company.

“It was just made up,” Davidson said.

Many of t he government witnesses are people involved in the ballplayer smuggling — as well as smuggling of other Cubans directly to the U. S. — who have pleaded guilty and are testifying in hopes of getting a reduced prison sentence, as well as others hoping to avoid any charges.

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Trainer Julio Estrada leaves court Wednesday in Miami, where he and sports agent Bartolo Hernandez are accused of smuggling Cuban ball players into the U. S.
LYNNE SLADKY / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Trainer Julio Estrada leaves court Wednesday in Miami, where he and sports agent Bartolo Hernandez are accused of smuggling Cuban ball players into the U. S.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada