Current:Home > ScamsArbitrator upholds 5-year bans of Bad Bunny baseball agency leaders, cuts agent penalty to 3 years -OceanicInvest
Arbitrator upholds 5-year bans of Bad Bunny baseball agency leaders, cuts agent penalty to 3 years
View
Date:2025-04-19 01:05:18
NEW YORK (AP) — An arbitrator upheld five-year suspensions of the chief executives of Bad Bunny’s sports representation firm for making improper inducements to players and cut the ban of the company’s only certified baseball agent to three years.
Ruth M. Moscovitch issued the ruling Oct. 30 in a case involving Noah Assad, Jonathan Miranda and William Arroyo of Rimas Sports. The ruling become public Tuesday when the Major League Baseball Players Association filed a petition to confirm the 80-page decision in New York Supreme Court in Manhattan.
The union issued a notice of discipline on April 10 revoking Arroyo’s agent certification and denying certification to Assad and Miranda, citing a $200,000 interest-free loan and a $19,500 gift. It barred them from reapplying for five years and prohibited certified agents from associating with any of the three of their affiliated companies. Assad, Miranda and Arroyo then appealed the decision, and Moscovitch was jointly appointed as the arbitrator on June 17.
Moscovitch said the union presented unchallenged evidence of “use of non-certified personnel to talk with and recruit players; use of uncertified staff to negotiate terms of players’ employment; giving things of value — concert tickets, gifts, money — to non-client players; providing loans, money, or other things of value to non-clients as inducements; providing or facilitating loans without seeking prior approval or reporting the loans.”
“I find MLBPA has met its burden to prove the alleged violations of regulations with substantial evidence on the record as a whole,” she wrote. “There can be no doubt that these are serious violations, both in the number of violations and the range of misconduct. As MLBPA executive director Anthony Clark testified, he has never seen so many violations of so many different regulations over a significant period of time.”
María de Lourdes Martínez, a spokeswoman for Rimas Sports, said she was checking to see whether the company had any comment on the decision. Arroyo did not immediately respond to a text message seeking comment.
Moscovitch held four in-person hearings from Sept. 30 to Oct. 7 and three on video from Oct. 10-16.
“While these kinds of gifts are standard in the entertainment business, under the MLBPA regulations, agents and agencies simply are not permitted to give them to non-clients,” she said.
Arroyo’s clients included Mets catcher Francisco Alvarez and teammate Ronny Mauricio.
“While it is true, as MLBPA alleges, that Mr. Arroyo violated the rules by not supervising uncertified personnel as they recruited players, he was put in that position by his employers,” Moscovitch wrote. “The regulations hold him vicariously liable for the actions of uncertified personnel at the agency. The reality is that he was put in an impossible position: the regulations impose on him supervisory authority over all of the uncertified operatives at Rimas, but in reality, he was their underling, with no authority over anyone.”
___
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/MLB
veryGood! (45484)
Related
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Khloe Kardashian Says She Hates Being in Her 30s After Celebrating 39th Birthday
- Warming Trends: Chilling in a Heat Wave, Healthy Food Should Eat Healthy Too, Breeding Delays for Wild Dogs, and Three Days of Climate Change in Song
- President Biden: Climate champion or fossil fuel friend?
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Opinion: The global gold rush puts the Amazon rainforest at greater risk
- Shares of smaller lenders sink once again, reviving fears about the banking sector
- In BuzzFeed fashion, 5 takeaways from Ben Smith's 'Traffic'
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Hurry to Charlotte Tilbury's Massive Summer Sale for 40% Off Deals on Pillow Talk, Flawless Filter & More
Ranking
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Maryland and Baltimore Agree to Continue State Supervision of the Deeply Troubled Back River Wastewater Treatment Plant
- A new film explains how the smartphone market slipped through BlackBerry's hands
- McDonald's franchises face more than $200,000 in fines for child-labor law violations
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- New York Is Facing a Pandemic-Fueled Home Energy Crisis, With No End in Sight
- Tracking the impact of U.S.-China tensions on global financial institutions
- FERC Says it Will Consider Greenhouse Gas Emissions and ‘Environmental Justice’ Impacts in Approving New Natural Gas Pipelines
Recommendation
What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
How the Fed got so powerful
Why Sarah Jessica Parker Was Upset Over Kim Cattrall's AJLT Cameo News Leak
Anthropologie 4th of July Deals: Here’s How To Save 85% On Clothes, Home Decor, and More
NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
Kyle Richards and Mauricio Umansky Address “Untrue” Divorce Rumors
In ‘Silent Spring,’ Rachel Carson Described a Fictional, Bucolic Hamlet, Much Like Her Hometown. Now, There’s a Plastics Plant Under Construction 30 Miles Away
Lead Poisonings of Children in Baltimore Are Down, but Lead Contamination Still Poses a Major Threat, a New Report Says