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Looks Like It’s Not Just Politicians Who Take Kickbacks

November 10, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: Chicago White Sox, Christopher Veatch, Kickbacks, Michelle Nasser, White Sox

This will probably be the biggest White Sox scandal since the Black Sox days, although management cooperated with the investigation that led to the indictments. The press release below comes from the U.S. Attorney in Chicago.

White Sox News page.

It hasn’t made the White Sox News Page yet.

FORMER CHICAGO WHITE SOX EXECUTIVE AND TWO FORMER SCOUTS FORSOX IN LATIN AMERICA INDICTED FOR ALLEGEDLY OBTAINING ILLEGAL KICKBACKS FROM PLAYERS’ SIGNING BONUSES

CHICAGO — A former professional baseball player scouting executive for the Chicago White Sox and two former scouts for the team in Latin America were indicted today on federal fraud charges for allegedly accepting kickbacks totaling approximately $400,000 from signing bonuses and contract buyouts paid to secure 23 prospective players between December 2004 and February 2008.

A seven-count indictment returned by a federal grand jury alleges that the White Sox baseball team was defrauded of money, as well as the honest services of the defendants, who allegedly concealed the kickbacks from the team and its more senior officials.

Charged with seven counts of mail fraud were

  • David S. Wilder, the White Sox farm system director from late 2003 to 2006, when he became the team’s senior director of player personnel until May 2008, and
  • Jorge L. Oquendo Rivera, the White Sox Latin American scout between November 2004 and October 2007.
  • Victor Mateo, a White Sox scout in the Dominican Republic between November 2006 and May 2008, was charged with three counts of mail fraud.

The indictment also seeks forfeiture of unspecified illegal proceeds from the alleged fraud scheme.

Wilder, 50, of San Francisco, and Oquendo, 49, of Aguadilla, Puerto Rico, are expected to voluntarily appear for arraignment at a later date to be determined in U.S. District Court in Chicago. A domestic arrest warrant was issued for Mateo, 39, of Arroyo Hondo, Dominican Republi

“The defendants were supposed to recruit players by paying amounts of money that matched their skills and were no greater than the amount needed to sign the players. Instead, the indictment alleges that the defendants secretly inflated those signing amounts to fund kickbacks for themselves,”

said Patrick J. Fitzgerald, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois.

“These defendants allegedly defrauded their employer and enriched themselves by taking advantage of vulnerable ballplayers, who were anxious to pursue their dreams of stardom in the major leagues,”

said Robert D. Grant, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

The investigation began after the Chicago White Sox reported internal findings to Major League Baseball and baseball officials referred the matter to federal authorities.

Both the White Sox and Major League Baseball cooperated with the investigation.

To provide for kickbacks, Wilder, Oquendo and Mateo allegedly misrepresented to the White Sox the amount of money necessary to sign certain players and omitted information about the payments, causing the Sox to pay artificially and fraudulently inflated signing bonuses to players and causing the Sox to purchase the contracts of and rights to players from other teams at artificially and fraudulently inflated prices.

The indictment does not specify the amounts of kickbacks allegedly obtained from signing certain players, nor does it name specific players.

According to the indictment, the White Sox maintained a Latin American scouting program to identify and recruit prospective players in such countries as

  • Brazil,
  • Colombia,
  • the Dominican Republic,
  • Mexico,
  • Panama and
  • Venezuela,

and to sign them to written contracts.

The Sox either paid a signing bonus, a one-time, up-front payment made to new players to induce them to sign a contract, or they purchased the contract rights to a player who was already affiliated with a Mexican baseball team by paying that team or its representative an amount necessary to induce the team to release the player to the White Sox.

Wilder was responsible for supervising the team’s scouts in Latin America, and he either authorized payments himself, or obtained authorization from additional Sox personnel, to sign new players based on recommendations made by the scouts.

Wilder was authorized to approve recommended signing amounts less than $100,000, but he was required to obtain approval from the team’s general manager to pay signing amounts of $100,000 or more.

After Wilder or the team approved a player’s signing amount and a written contract was secured, and Major League Baseball conducted a background check and approved the signing, the White Sox issued a check drawn on a bank account in Chicago, which was made payable either to the player or the Mexican team with which a player was affiliated or the Mexican team’s representative.

If the player was located in the Dominican Republic, the Sox sent the signing bonus check to the Major League Baseball office in Santo Domingo directly, or through its offices in New York, and baseball personnel would then provide the check to the player.

If the player was located in another Latin American country, the Sox sent the signing bonus check to the scout who recruited the player and the scout was responsible for providing the check to the player.

As part of the scheme, Oquendo and Mateo allegedly scouted for and identified prospective Sox players in Latin America from whom they could obtain a portion of the players’ signing bonuses.

They also allegedly engaged in discussions with these players or their representatives about the amount of signing bonuses, as well as the amount the players were willing or expected to pay in kickbacks to them and Wilder.

Oquendo allegedly engaged in these same practices in his negotiations with Mexican teams and their representatives.

After this initial phase, Oquendo and Mateo, directly and indirectly, allegedly informed Wilder of the prospective players’ skill levels, the preliminarily negotiated signing bonus and contract purchase amounts, and whether kickbacks could be obtained from the players’ signings.

Wilder then allegedly approved signings under $100,000, knowing that the amounts were inflated to include undisclosed kickbacks for himself and his co-schemers, and misrepresented to other team officials the amount that was necessary to sign the players.

Similarly, in instances when Wilder obtained authorization from the team’s general manager to sign players for more than $100,000, he allegedly deceived the general manager, knowing that the amounts were fraudulently inflated to obtain undisclosed kickbacks for himself and his co-schemers and were greater than necessary.

The seven mail fraud counts allege the mailing of various checks from the White Sox, in amounts ranging from $30,000 to $525,000, to unnamed players, or teams for the contract rights to players, in various Latin American countries.

The government is being represented by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Christopher K. Veatch and Michelle Nasser.

Each count of mail fraud carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine, and restitution is mandatory. The Court may also impose a fine totaling twice the loss to any victim or twice the gain to the defendant, whichever is greater. If convicted, the Court must impose a reasonable sentence under the advisory United States Sentencing Guidelines.

An indictment contains only charges and is not evidence of guilt. The defendants are presumed innocent and are entitled to a fair trial at which the government has the burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.I’t Not Just

Message of the Day – A Flag

April 28, 2008 By: Cal Skinner Category: Baseball, Brooklyn Dodgers, Chicago Cubs, Flag, Half Mast, LA Dodgers, White Sox

I’m not much of a sports fan.

Haven’t been since the Dodgers moved from Brooklyn, although I did win some money betting from irrational White Sox fans betting on the LA version when they faced off in the World Series right while in my final two years of high school after moving from Middletown, New York, to Crystal Lake.

But, still, this Cubs flag deserves more publicity than it gets from being on a busy corner in a Lake in the Hills subdivision.

Don’t you think?

Half mast and all.

As you can see I took it during winter.

Or was it late spring?

I wonder if it is still at half mast.

Message of the Day – A Flag

April 28, 2008 By: Cal Skinner Category: Baseball, Brooklyn Dodgers, Chicago Cubs, Flag, Half Mast, LA Dodgers, White Sox

I’m not much of a sports fan.

Haven’t been since the Dodgers moved from Brooklyn, although I did win some money betting from irrational White Sox fans betting on the LA version when they faced off in the World Series right while in my final two years of high school after moving from Middletown, New York, to Crystal Lake.

But, still, this Cubs flag deserves more publicity than it gets from being on a busy corner in a Lake in the Hills subdivision.

Don’t you think?

Half mast and all.

As you can see I took it during winter.

Or was it late spring?

I wonder if it is still at half mast.

White Sox Metra Station

April 09, 2008 By: Cal Skinner Category: David Baker, IIT, Illinois Institute of Technology, Jeff Ladd, Metra, White Sox

More pork for the Chicago White Sox.

The new stadium wasn’t enough.

Now folks like Congressman Bobby Rush was a Metra train station.

The Daily Southtown’s Guy Tridgell is reporting that Rush garnered $4.2 million to subsidize such a stop on the Rock Island Line.

That’s old news. It’s a 2005 appropriation. More money is needed, but expected from state and federal pockets.

The new news is that it will be open for the 2009 season. Construction starts this summer.

In the spirit of telling more of the story, the station will also serve the Illinois Institute of Technology, so it’s not just Sox pork. There is will connect to the CTA’s Red and Green lines.

So, maybe it’s well placed pork.

The fans using Metra, however, will be able to drink more of the absurdly overpriced beer sold at Sox Park and not have to worry about getting a DUI citation.

And it will be perfect, if Chicago lands the Olympics.

And, there is even a McHenry County connection.

The story relates the opposition of former Metra Chairman Jeff Ladd:

“For years, the push for a station catering to baseball fans and IIT faced big resistance from Metra and its longtime chairman Jeff Ladd, who derided the concept, saying the station would only be used 81 days out of the year — the number of home games at the ballpark at 35th Street and Shields Avenue.

“Ladd resigned from the Metra board in 2006. Four months later, Metra hired an architectural firm for $800,000 to design the station.

“’Jeff Ladd was the one who absolutely opposed it,’ (IIT VP David) Baker said. ‘He is gone.’”

White Sox Metra Station

April 09, 2008 By: Cal Skinner Category: David Baker, IIT, Illinois Institute of Technology, Jeff Ladd, Metra, White Sox

More pork for the Chicago White Sox.

The new stadium wasn’t enough.

Now folks like Congressman Bobby Rush was a Metra train station.

The Daily Southtown’s Guy Tridgell is reporting that Rush garnered $4.2 million to subsidize such a stop on the Rock Island Line.

That’s old news. It’s a 2005 appropriation. More money is needed, but expected from state and federal pockets.

The new news is that it will be open for the 2009 season. Construction starts this summer.

In the spirit of telling more of the story, the station will also serve the Illinois Institute of Technology, so it’s not just Sox pork. There is will connect to the CTA’s Red and Green lines.

So, maybe it’s well placed pork.

The fans using Metra, however, will be able to drink more of the absurdly overpriced beer sold at Sox Park and not have to worry about getting a DUI citation.

And it will be perfect, if Chicago lands the Olympics.

And, there is even a McHenry County connection.

The story relates the opposition of former Metra Chairman Jeff Ladd:

“For years, the push for a station catering to baseball fans and IIT faced big resistance from Metra and its longtime chairman Jeff Ladd, who derided the concept, saying the station would only be used 81 days out of the year — the number of home games at the ballpark at 35th Street and Shields Avenue.

“Ladd resigned from the Metra board in 2006. Four months later, Metra hired an architectural firm for $800,000 to design the station.

“’Jeff Ladd was the one who absolutely opposed it,’ (IIT VP David) Baker said. ‘He is gone.’”

Peanuts, Popcorn, Cold Beer

December 13, 2007 By: Cal Skinner Category: Cubs, Illinois Sports Facilities Authority, Rod Blagojevich, Tax Increment Financing District, TIF, White Sox, Wrigley Field

In the

Are They Nuts?

category is state officials considering that state taxpayers might buy Wrigley Field.

That’s what immediately came to mind when I saw the teaser on the top left of the front page of Thursday’s Chicago Tribune.

Is this some trade-off in which the Tribune would agree to support Governor Rod Blagojevich for a third term, if he rushed to the rescue of the Tribune?

I heard on the radio, but didn’t listen to carefully, that for the deal to sell the Tribune to go through, the company has to get rid of the Cubs operation by the first of the year.

Some of you know that I’m not a sports fan.

I figure politics has pretty much the same elements as sports, but could cost me money. Only rarely does sports cost me money.

I can think of state government’s building the new White Sox stadium. I can think of McHenry County College’s trying to put us taxpayers at risk by building a minor league baseball stadium for investors unknown.

So, I didn’t toss the Sports section on the floor for re-cycling today. I’m actually reading a story in it. Maybe it belongs in the business section of the paper.

“It is unclear how the state and ISFA (Illinois Sports Facilities Authority) would raise funds for such a purchase, which would fetch hundreds of millions if sold,” Jim Kirk’s article says.

But it’s not just state taxpayers who would be at risk, the Tribune Company is talking to Mayor Richard Daley, too.

I can hear another big Tax Increment Financing district rolling through city council on this one.

Take the money from Chicago schools. Only the Chicago Reader will figure it out and they are laying off a higher percentage of reporters than the Tribune now that personals can be found on the internet.

And why would the Tribune want to sell the ballpark to the state?

To shift renovation costs from the Cubs prospective buyer. That would increase the price paid for the team.

There’s certainly something shifty here.

In my grad school public finance class at the University of Michigan, it was discussed in the class on incidence. It was about who really pays the cost of something.

With “public-private partnerships” all the rage, why wouldn’t the Tribune think the taxpayers would bail it out?

After all, when the Cubs finally do get to a World Series, wouldn’t all the (well, maybe, not the Cardinal fans) legislators want tickets?

I remember when the White Sox were almost in the World Series in the 1990’s, I had the opportunity to buy tickets for the play offs at face value.

That inducement would probably be enough to get state legislators to vote for such a deal.

= = = = =
The picture of Wrigley Field came from a State of Illinois taxpayer financed web site.

Peanuts, Popcorn, Cold Beer

December 13, 2007 By: Cal Skinner Category: Cubs, Illinois Sports Facilities Authority, Rod Blagojevich, Tax Increment Financing District, TIF, White Sox, Wrigley Field

In the

Are They Nuts?

category is state officials considering that state taxpayers might buy Wrigley Field.

That’s what immediately came to mind when I saw the teaser on the top left of the front page of Thursday’s Chicago Tribune.

Is this some trade-off in which the Tribune would agree to support Governor Rod Blagojevich for a third term, if he rushed to the rescue of the Tribune?

I heard on the radio, but didn’t listen to carefully, that for the deal to sell the Tribune to go through, the company has to get rid of the Cubs operation by the first of the year.

Some of you know that I’m not a sports fan.

I figure politics has pretty much the same elements as sports, but could cost me money. Only rarely does sports cost me money.

I can think of state government’s building the new White Sox stadium. I can think of McHenry County College’s trying to put us taxpayers at risk by building a minor league baseball stadium for investors unknown.

So, I didn’t toss the Sports section on the floor for re-cycling today. I’m actually reading a story in it. Maybe it belongs in the business section of the paper.

“It is unclear how the state and ISFA (Illinois Sports Facilities Authority) would raise funds for such a purchase, which would fetch hundreds of millions if sold,” Jim Kirk’s article says.

But it’s not just state taxpayers who would be at risk, the Tribune Company is talking to Mayor Richard Daley, too.

I can hear another big Tax Increment Financing district rolling through city council on this one.

Take the money from Chicago schools. Only the Chicago Reader will figure it out and they are laying off a higher percentage of reporters than the Tribune now that personals can be found on the internet.

And why would the Tribune want to sell the ballpark to the state?

To shift renovation costs from the Cubs prospective buyer. That would increase the price paid for the team.

There’s certainly something shifty here.

In my grad school public finance class at the University of Michigan, it was discussed in the class on incidence. It was about who really pays the cost of something.

With “public-private partnerships” all the rage, why wouldn’t the Tribune think the taxpayers would bail it out?

After all, when the Cubs finally do get to a World Series, wouldn’t all the (well, maybe, not the Cardinal fans) legislators want tickets?

I remember when the White Sox were almost in the World Series in the 1990’s, I had the opportunity to buy tickets for the play offs at face value.

That inducement would probably be enough to get state legislators to vote for such a deal.

= = = = =
The picture of Wrigley Field came from a State of Illinois taxpayer financed web site.

Message of the Day – Bumper Stickers

October 19, 2007 By: Cal Skinner Category: Baja, Bumper Sticker, Firefighter, Kilt, Message of the Day, Motorcyclist, White Sox

This car probably has the most bumper stickers of any I have taken pictures of.

There are eight of them.

You really have to enlarge the picture by clicking on it to get the full impact.

Let’s look at the ones on the left side first.

The first one has a motorcycle rider being blow parallel to the bike by the wind.

WORK TO RIDE

RIDE TO WORK

The second may be a reference to a past vacation:

GOT BAJA

Bottom left appears

UNION
FIREFIGHTER
AND PROUD OF IT

There is also the logo of the firefighters union.

These are on the right side:

I LIVE WITH FEAR AND DANGER EVERY DAY
BUT, OCCASIONALLY, I LEAVE HER TO FIGHT A FIRE!

There are three in the middle. The biggest has a motor cycle wearing the number “15” with the word “FUEL” in larger letters next to the rider.

2007 EAA” with a plane flying out of the letters is to the left.

Beneath the EAA sticker is an English dragon standing up with “Sport Kilt” above the crest.

And, at the bottom is a White Sox

World Series Champions

bumper sticker.

So, we know this car is owned by a male, fire fighting, motor cycle riding, White Sox fan and, maybe, that he wears kilts and vacations in Baja.

Can you come up with anything else?

Message of the Day – Bumper Stickers

October 19, 2007 By: Cal Skinner Category: Baja, Bumper Sticker, Firefighter, Kilt, Message of the Day, Motorcyclist, White Sox

This car probably has the most bumper stickers of any I have taken pictures of.

There are eight of them.

You really have to enlarge the picture by clicking on it to get the full impact.

Let’s look at the ones on the left side first.

The first one has a motorcycle rider being blow parallel to the bike by the wind.

WORK TO RIDE

RIDE TO WORK

The second may be a reference to a past vacation:

GOT BAJA

Bottom left appears

UNION
FIREFIGHTER
AND PROUD OF IT

There is also the logo of the firefighters union.

These are on the right side:

I LIVE WITH FEAR AND DANGER EVERY DAY
BUT, OCCASIONALLY, I LEAVE HER TO FIGHT A FIRE!

There are three in the middle. The biggest has a motor cycle wearing the number “15” with the word “FUEL” in larger letters next to the rider.

2007 EAA” with a plane flying out of the letters is to the left.

Beneath the EAA sticker is an English dragon standing up with “Sport Kilt” above the crest.

And, at the bottom is a White Sox

World Series Champions

bumper sticker.

So, we know this car is owned by a male, fire fighting, motor cycle riding, White Sox fan and, maybe, that he wears kilts and vacations in Baja.

Can you come up with anything else?