The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Jury convicts agent of Cuban smuggling

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By Curt Anderson MIAMI >> A Miami jury on Wednesday convicted a Florida sports agent and a baseball trainer on charges they smuggled Cuban baseball players to the U.S. in search of big profits from profession­al free agent contracts.

The verdict came after jurors heard about six weeks of testimony in the trial of Bartolo Hernandez and Julio Estrada, who were indicted on conspiracy and alien smuggling charges for an operation that began in 2009 and involved a number of highprofil­e Major League Baseball players.

Trial evidence showed an existing Cuban smuggling operation that brought people from the communistr­un island to Mexico became the platform in 2009 for the much more lucrative trade in elite ballplayer­s. People involved in that operation testified it was ultimately overseen by Hernandez and Estrada.

The players would be whisked from Cuba to Mexico or Haiti in a speedboat, sign papers claiming residency in their new country and eventually be cleared to sign with MLB teams. Prosecutor­s showed jurors how many of those documents contained false informatio­n, such as madeup jobs for players, and some travel documents were forged.

In one of the trial’s memorable moments, Chicago White Sox star Jose Abreu testified that he ate a piece of his phony Haitian passport while flying to the U.S. in 2013 because he feared repercussi­ons if he landed in Miami with a fake document. Abreu soon after signed a $68 million deal with Chicago.

Testimony also showed there was competitio­n in Mexico for custody of the players involving criminal organizati­ons. Seattle Mariners outfielder Leonys Martin told jurors about an attempt to kidnap him in which men who claimed to be armed broke into his apartment with a crowbar. Martin eventually walked across the U.S. border at Laredo, Texas, and signed a $15.5 million contract with the Texas Rangers, who later traded him.

In each case, the players were required to sign contracts agreeing to pay Estrada and his organizati­on about a third of whatever they made with U.S. teams, with Hernandez getting 5 percent to represent them in negotiatio­ns with teams. Abreu, for example, said he paid Estrada more than $7 million after signing his White Sox contract.

The defense attorneys told jurors Hernandez and Estrada ran legitimate businesses and were not overseeing an illegal smuggling ring.

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