Little League exploited JRW players: attorney
The Jackie Robinson West baseball players deserve their national crown back after having the bases pulled out from under them by the “exploitive” Little League, said attorney James Karamanis on Monday.
The Jackie Robinson West baseball players deserve their national crown back after having the bases pulled out from under them by “exploitive” Little League and team officials who were informed of their addresses — and potential residency violations — months before the youths were stripped of the title for living beyond team boundaries, their lawyer said Monday.
Before the team lost the national trophy a year ago, they were celebrated at the White House. Their triumph delighted and united Chicago.
But any initial residency questions were met with official silence, said attorney James Karamanis. He filed the lawsuit last week and met with reporters Monday. That lawsuit suggests Little League sought to profit from the Cinderella story by delaying a response until after it inked a new deal with ESPN.
From qualifying tournaments through the championship during the summer of 2014, the players’ parents submitted documentation to JRW Inc., which filed birth certificates, boundary maps and proof of addresses with the district and region, Karamanis said.
At the end of the regional tournaments, Little League “may have become aware of potential residency issues,” he said, but “they allowed the JRWteam to play on.”
Even after winning the national crown in August of 2014, “no one from the Little League, JRW Inc. said anything,” said Karamanis.
Though a Sept. 9, 2014, email from team leader Bill Haley indicated there might be some ineligible players, “none of this was communicated to any of the parents,” he said.
Instead, “Little League and JRW Inc. allowed the tournament team to go to the White House” in November 2014, he said.
Players Lawrence Noble and Brandon Green and a number of team parents attended the lawyer’s news conference Monday at the Woodshop Art Gallery, 441 E. 75th. St. They stood for a photo underneath an Annie Lee print of a baseball player but declined to speak.
“We’re family,” said Linda Sneed, mother of player Marquis Jackson.
Little League said the organization stood by its actions, and ESPN has declined comment.
“As Little League International has not yet been served with this lawsuit and as it involves the interests of minors, at this time it would be inappropriate to comment further,” a Little League spokesman said via email.