Shohei Ohtani’s former translator Ippei Mizuhara allegedly stole more than $16 million from the Los Angeles Dodgers star to cover millions of dollars of gambling debts, the U.S. attorney’s office announced Thursday.
The office, which filed a criminal complaint against Mizuhara on Thursday, also said Ohtani had no knowledge of the fraud and is considered a victim in the case.
The bets were not placed on baseball games, the office said.
Mizuhara had been Ohtani’s translator for years. During that time, the attorney’s office discovered Mizuhara had full access to Ohtani’s bank accounts. Phone records indicate he accessed them online and lied to the bank, pretending to be Ohtani, the office said. He refused to give access to the accounts to Ohtani’s agent and other advisors.
On March 20, 2024, Mizuhara admitted to a bookmaker in an encrypted text message that he had stolen the money from Ohtani, according to the complaint. “Technically I did steal from him. It’s all over for me,” he wrote.
“Due to the position of trust, he had unique access to his finances and he used and abused that place of trust to take advantage of Mr. Ohtani,” said U.S. Attorney Martin Estrada.
Mizuhara has been the subject of a federal investigation surrounding millions of dollars in wire transfers originating from Ohtani’s bank account to an illegal bookmaker beginning in November 2021.
Attorneys for Ohtani, Mizuhara and the Dodgers declined to comment on the charges.
The Ohtani fraud was first discovered as the U.S. Department of Justice was looking into illegal sports bookmaking operations in Southern California and the laundering of the proceeds of those operations through casinos in Las Vegas. The investigations have led to criminal charges and/or convictions of 12 criminal defendants, the complaint said.
While sports gambling is legal in 38 states and Washington, D.C., it is illegal in California, which has driven some bettors to illegal operations.
Mizuhara faces a maximum sentence of 30 years in…
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