I’m sure Ohtani can speak basic-conversational English, but as pointed out, for the sort of highly-advanced/legalese/professional/contract stuff he’d have to deal with, he absolutely needs a top-notch interpreter, if not several.
The bit about a $1 million dollar bet through a Japanese bookie was from a random twitter post. According to the LA Times story I read this morning the $4.2 million gambling debt was to an illegal bookie in California. That bookie’s residence was reportedly recently raided by law enforcement.
Well, I guess the joke fell flat. What I was going for was if he didn’t have an interpreter, he couldn’t be stealing from him. However. would also lose a convenient Scapgoat.
And to answer your specific question, Lots of stuff.
Yen10 million = USD66,000 (at today’s exchange rate). Maybe USD120,000 when the yen was strongest historically vis a vis the dollar. Not even a slap on the wrist unless you’re missing a couple of zeros
Are you arguing for the sake of arguing? Or do you have a point?
NPB takes player gambling seriously, even if they don’t punish the team too severely for the actions of the individual team members.
Certainly, the resignation of the team rep to the league is in character for Japanese business, and a fairly significant gesture of the team’s acceptance of responsibility. Culturally, that’s more important than the money.
I’m a bookkeeper and I have worked for people who are obsessive about their bank balance and keep a very tight hold on all of their bank accounts, but I’ve also worked for people who aren’t like that. When they know they make a lot of money, they just tell me to transfer x amount of dollars for this latest thing they want, they don’t care beyond that. As long as I haven’t bled the account dry, it wouldn’t be hard to steal from the second kind of person.
They usually do get caught, but it can take years.
So, I’m willing to give him the benefit of doubt for now.
You have no way of knowing this because it’s impossible to know how many don’t get caught. Someone careful and who doesn’t get in over their head with crazy debts/addictions could pull it off forever. Ohtani would probably never notice $150k/year.
You are absolutely correct. I should have worded that a little differently. Let’s just say, you will sometimes hear of someone being caught after many years.
You hear about it all the time. I know of two people, both wives of friends, who pulled it off for a long time. One was the office manager of a two person medical practice. She embezzled over $100k from them over the couse of a several years. She had no idea how much and ~$100k was all they could prove. It was likely two or three times that much. She spent 18 months imprisoned. One was the accountant of a small business. She would swipe petty cash when she was short on bills and always paid it back until one time she couldn’t. She just lost her job.
Exactly this. Pete Rose could be reinstated; he’s applied for reinstatement several times, under Fay Vincent, Bud Selig, and now Rob Manfred. But, each commissioner has either refused to act on the petitions, or indicated that Rose’s continued gambling and general attitude have led them to deny the request.
And, frankly, it’s pretty clear that the only reason Rose has continued to seek reinstatement is that he quite desperately wants to be in the Hall of Fame.
It has come to the attention of law enforcement that $4.5 million was wired from Shohei Ohtani’s personal bank account to the account of an illegal bookmaker. As a general rule, when funds are transferred from someone’s personal bank account, the likeliest explanation is that the owner of the account initiated the transfer. Likewise, when someone transfers large sums of money to the account of an illegal bookmaker, they are most usually doing so in order to cover their gambling debts.
So if you’re going to say there is “absolutely no evidence” suggesting that Ohtani may have been illegally gambling…well, I think Donald Trump would be happy to have you on his jury!
There is still a lot of this story to come out, but it seems far more likely that the interpreter is the one with the gambling debt, not Ohtani. You can keep backtracking, but I don’t think you’ll be able to siphon any of your poison out of that well.
Certainly - I’m not suggesting he’s scot-free, merely that there’s no smoking gun at the moment, and that the massive exaggerations in the OP should be tempered with some actual context.
I worked in Japan for UBS for several years, and in Hong Kong for Nikko Securities for more. Resignation of a patsy is part of the corporate game. All companies have a figurehead who’s job is to fall on their sword when the time comes. I call BS on the “culturally, that’s more important than the money”. Spoken like someone with a very surface understanding of Japanese culture and corporate culture.
I am extremely familiar with that case. More than I am comfortable sharing on here.
That case was about searches. Although the principle for the level of proof in the same it’s different in focus.
A reasonable articulable suspicion is what a police officer has when he continues an investigation. When the investigation yields enough evidence to rise to probable cause then a criminal charge can be filed. A simple way to look at it is with a motor vehicle stop. The officer needs RAS to pull over a car. He needs PC to write a ticket.