Los Angeles Times

Skaggs’ drug connection is reported

Kay, a media relations employee for the Angels, doesn’t want to be ‘scapegoat.’

- By Mike DiGiovanna

The attorney for an Angels employee who reportedly provided opioids to Tyler Skaggs described the pitcher as “an addict who overdosed.”

Eric Kay, who has worked for the team in media relations for 24 years, engaged Newport Beach criminal defense attorney Michael Molfetta nearly two months ago out of concern that he might be made a “scapegoat” in the investigat­ion into the drug-related death of Skaggs.

On Saturday, ESPN reported that Kay told federal investigat­ors he provided oxycodone to Skaggs and abused it with him for years.

Citing two people familiar with the investigat­ion, ESPN also reported that Kay said two team officials were told about Skaggs’ drug use long before his death and that Kay gave U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion agents the names of five other players who he believed were using opiates while they were Angels. Tim Mead, Kay’s former supervisor with the Angels and now president of the Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstow­n, N.Y., is one of the employees implicated.

Mead told The Times on Saturday that Kay never mentioned to him that Skaggs might be an opioid user. “Eric and I conversed about a lot of things over the years,” Mead said. “Tyler and opioids were not one of them.”

The second employee who might have had knowledge of Skaggs’ opioid use, the Angels were told, was Tom Taylor, the club’s traveling secretary. Taylor denied it.

“Before Tyler’s death, Eric Kay never told me anything about Tyler or any player seeking narcotics, or about Eric providing narcotics to any player,” Taylor said in a statement to The Times.

John Carpino, president of the Angels, said in a statement: “We have never heard that any employee was providing illegal narcotics to any player, or that any player was seeking illegal narcotics. The Angels maintain a strict zero-tolerance policy regarding the illicit use of drugs for both players and staff. Every one of our players must also abide by the

‘I can state unequivoca­lly that anyone who blames Eric Kay for Tyler Skaggs’ death is incorrect.’ — Michael Molfetta, attorney for Kay, who reportedly told federal investigat­ors he provided oxycodone to Skaggs

MLB Joint Drug Agreement. We continue to mourn the loss of Tyler and fully cooperate with the authoritie­s as they continue their investigat­ion.”

Molfetta could not be reached Saturday, but in a September interview with The Times, he acknowledg­ed that Kay, 44, had been linked to the case.

“I just know that attempts to blame any one person for another person’s addiction are extremely naive,” Molfetta said. “I think any attempts to blame Eric Kay for what happened are shortsight­ed and misguided. When all the facts come out, I think that what happened is a tragedy. What happened is very sad on many levels. But to say it’s any one person’s fault is not right.”

Skaggs, 27, had the opioids fentanyl and oxycodone in his system along with alcohol when he was found dead in his Southlake, Texas, hotel room July 1 during an Angels trip. The Skaggs family hired Houston criminal defense attorney Rusty Hardin to represent them. The Angels hired Fort Worth trial attorney John Cayce to represent them.

“The Skaggs family continues to mourn the loss of a beloved son, brother, husband and son-in-law,” Hardin said in a statement Saturday. “They greatly appreciate the work that law enforcemen­t is doing, and are patiently awaiting the results of the investigat­ion.”

Kay was on the team’s June 30 charter flight to Texas and stayed in the team’s Southlake hotel the night Skaggs died. He worked during the series in Texas on July 2-4 but took a leave of absence in mid-July. Though Kay has not reported to work since, Molfetta said he is still an Angels employee.

According to ESPN, Kay told investigat­ors that he illegally obtained six oxycodone pills and gave three to Skaggs several days before the team left California for Texas. Skaggs texted Kay the day the team left seeking more oxycodone, a request Kay told investigat­ors he was unable to fulfill.

Agents learned about the oxycodone transactio­ns between Kay and Skaggs after reviewing text messages between the two, ESPN reported, citing sources. Kay also reportedly told investigat­ors that Skaggs snorted three lines of crushed opioids in front of him in the Texas hotel room but that Kay did not partake in the drugs with the player because he was on a medication that would have negated the effects.

A review of Venmo transactio­ns showed payments between Skaggs and Kay, although for what is not clear. The latest payment reviewed by The Times was from April. ESPN reported that Kay’s mother, Sandy, told the network’s “Outside the Lines” show that her son started abusing opioids a few years after his father died in 1998 and that Kay is currently in outpatient treatment for substance abuse. Kay could not be reached for comment Saturday.

Skaggs’ family members issued a statement after his death saying they were “shocked to learn that it may involve an employee of the Angels. We will not rest until we learn the truth about how Tyler came into possession of these narcotics, including who supplied them.”

Asked by The Times if his client supplied any of the illegal substances that Skaggs used, Molfetta said, “I can state unequivoca­lly that anyone who blames Eric Kay for Tyler Skaggs’ death is incorrect. Trying to lay blame at any one person’s feet is not just morally wrong, it’s factually wrong.”

Major League Baseball launched an investigat­ion into Skaggs’ death based on the family’s statement about an Angels employee perhaps being involved. MLB deputy commission­er Dan Halem told The Times in late September that the investigat­ion was on hold until the DEA and Southlake police probes were completed. “MLB was unaware of any of these allegation­s,” a league spokesman said in a statement Saturday. “MLB will fully cooperate with the government investigat­ion and conduct its own investigat­ion when the government investigat­ion is completed.”

The league does not plan to accelerate its investigat­ion, even with the allegation that other players might be identified as users.

Reports and informatio­n from the police and other first responders related to the incident have not been released. The Times and other news organizati­ons have sought the material, but an attorney representi­ng the city has asked the Texas attorney general for guidance on whether the records are exempt from disclosure laws. No decision has been made.

Opioids such as fentanyl and oxycodone can be legally obtained and possessed only with a medical prescripti­on.

Attorneys have said that tens of millions of dollars could be at stake in a potential wrongful-death lawsuit if attorneys can prove a party besides Skaggs might be at least partially responsibl­e for his death.

“The young man obviously had a problem and he paid a very high price for his problem, and sometimes that’s the way life works,” Molfetta said. “Sometimes you make a series of horrible decisions and you pay a very high price.”

 ?? John Sleezer Kansas City Star ?? ANGELS PITCHER Tyler Skaggs had the opioids fentanyl and oxycodone in his system along with alcohol when he was found dead in his Southlake, Texas, hotel room July 1 during a trip to play the Rangers.
John Sleezer Kansas City Star ANGELS PITCHER Tyler Skaggs had the opioids fentanyl and oxycodone in his system along with alcohol when he was found dead in his Southlake, Texas, hotel room July 1 during a trip to play the Rangers.

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