Chattanooga Times Free Press

Feds: Ohtani is the victim

- BY STEFANIE DAZIO

LOS ANGELES — Federal authoritie­s charged the former longtime interprete­r for Major League Baseball star Shohei Ohtani on Thursday with federal bank fraud, alleging he stole more than $16 million from the Japanese sensation to cover gambling bets and debts.

Interprete­r Ippei Mizuhara, a constant presence beside Ohtani in MLB stadiums since 2018, abused the two-way player’s trust in him and exploited the language barrier to plunder a bank account that only he could access, prosecutor­s said.

U.S. Attorney Martin Estrada said Mizuhara was so intertwine­d in Ohtani’s life and career that he became his “de facto manager.” The role enabled him to withdraw money from the account — at times lying and impersonat­ing Ohtani to bank employees — to finance his “insatiable appetite for illegal sports betting.”

Thursday’s announceme­nt, at a packed news conference in downtown Los Angeles, ended weeks of speculatio­n about Mizuhara’s self-admitted gambling problems, the wide-ranging federal investigat­ion and Ohtani’s role in the scandal.

Estrada said there is no evidence that Ohtani was aware of his interprete­r’s actions, adding that the Los Angeles Dodgers player has cooperated with investigat­ors.

“I want to emphasize this point: Mr. Ohtani is considered a victim in this case,” he said.

The criminal complaint — detailing the scheme through text messages, financial records and recordings of phone calls — showed even Mizuhara knew the game was over. In a message to his illegal bookmaker on March 20, the day the Los Angeles Times and ESPN broke the news of the investigat­ion, he wrote: “Technicall­y I did steal from him. it’s all over for me.”

Mizuhara faces up to 30 years in federal prison if he’s convicted of a single count of bank fraud. His attorney, Michael G. Freedman, declined to comment Thursday. Mizuhara’s first appearance in federal court is likely to occur this week.

The scale of the theft shocked the sports world, but it also further absolved Ohtani from wrongdoing in baseball’s biggest gambling disgrace since Pete Rose was banned for life.

MLB opened its own investigat­ion after the controvers­y surfaced last month, and the Dodgers immediatel­y fired Mizuhara. In a statement released Thursday, though, MLB said that it “will wait until resolution of the criminal proceeding to determine whether further investigat­ion is warranted.”

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