The Wichita Eagle (Sunday)

Kansas man admits stealing Jackie Robinson statue from park

- BY AMY RENEE LEIKER aleiker@wichitaeag­le.com Amy Renee Leiker: 316-268-6644, @AmyReneeLe­iker

A Wichita man has admitted to stealing a valuable, life-sized bronze statue of baseball great Jackie Robinson from a

Wichita park in January.

Ricky Angel Alderete, 45, pleaded guilty to four crimes Thursday at his arraignmen­t: aggravated criminal damage to property; theft of property or services valued at $25,000 to $100,000; making false informatio­n; and identity theft.

Alderete is scheduled for sentencing on July 1 by Sedgwick County District Judge Tyler Roush, court records show. The maximum sentence he could receive is 19 years, 1 month in prison plus six months in jail, Sedgwick County District Attorney Office spokesman Dan Dillon said by email. The judge could also order Alderete to pay restitutio­n of $41,500, the amount the statue originally cost.

Wichita police arrested Alderete after the 275pound statue was cut off above its cleats early on Jan. 25 and hauled away from McAdams Park,

1329 E. 16th St. The statue, unveiled in the park in 2021, had been a main gathering place for Wichita nonprofit League 42, a local youth baseball league that strives to make playing the game affordable, especially for urban families. The league, which serves about 600 kids in Wichita, also provides mentoring, tutoring and other resources.

“One part of this unfortunat­e saga has been put to bed,” League 42 founder and executive director Bob Lutz said in a Facebook post Thursday noting the plea.

Surveillan­ce video that captured the theft showed at least three suspects.

But it’s unclear whether anyone else will be charged.

“No other cases in connection with the statue theft are scheduled in our office,” Dillon said Friday.

Wichita police Chief

Joe Sullivan said previously he is “confident” Alderete’s arrest “is only the first” and that “there will be a lot more to come.”

The statue was found two days after the theft, burned in a trash can at Garvey Park, about seven miles away from where it was stolen. It was valued at $75,000.

Alderete, in a police interview after his arrest, told investigat­ors he and others stole the statue and turned it over to metal scrappers but said he “was never paid for his part,” a probable cause affidavit released by the court says. Alderete told investigat­ors someone else cut the statue off at the legs with a concrete saw and he helped push the statue over and “load it into the truck” that hauled it away from the park, the affidavit says.

None of the burned statue was salvageabl­e but the cleats that the thieves left in McAdams Park were donated last month to the Negro Leagues Baseball

Museum in Kansas City, where they will be displayed. The statue will be replaced, though; Lutz previously told The Eagle the organizati­on still has a mold from the original sculptor, the late John Parsons, who died in 2022, so it can be recast.

Since the theft, thousands of dollars have poured into the League 42 organizati­on to help pay for the replacemen­t. Major League Baseball and its 30 teams also stepped up with funds to replace the statue.

Robinson, who wore number 42, was the first Black player in Major League Baseball, breaking the color barrier in 1947. He played for the Brooklyn Dodgers.

League 42 is named after him. The life-sized statue of Robinson represente­d the league’s core values.

Alderete remained in the Sedgwick County Jail on Friday morning. Two of the crimes he pleaded guilty to — criminal damage to property and theft — are connected to the stolen Jackie Robinson statue. The other two crimes, making false informatio­n and identity theft, “led to Alderete’s identifica­tion and arrest,” Dillon said.

 ?? TRAVIS HEYING The Wichita Eagle ?? A statue of legendary baseball pioneer Jackie Robinson was stolen from the League 42 field off of 17th Street recently.
TRAVIS HEYING The Wichita Eagle A statue of legendary baseball pioneer Jackie Robinson was stolen from the League 42 field off of 17th Street recently.

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