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Shohei Ohtani ‘was a victim of fraud and his interpreter will be CHARGED amid fears he stole MORE than $4.5m’ from the Dodgers star to cover gambling debts – with the $700m MLB man exonerated

Shohei Ohtani is set to be officially cleared of any wrongdoing in the investigation carried out by federal authorities into the gambling scandal that rocked the $700million Los Angeles Dodgers star.

According to TMZ Sports, Ohtani is a victim of fraud and his translator Ippei Mizuhara is going to be charged any day. The New York Times says Mizuhara is in negotiations to plead guilty.

He was fired  by the Dodgers in March amid allegations he stole $4.5m to cover debts owed to illegal bookmakers. The investigation began soon after, around three weeks ago, and it now appears the the 29-year-old Japanese star is set to be fully exonerated. 

The Times says that evidence has been uncovered to suggest Mizuhara stole more than the initial $4.5m from Ohtani that was first suspected and he had enough access to Ohtani’s bank account that he could remove alerts being sent to the baseball star about money being removed.

TMZ’s report on Wednesday night adds that Ohtani – a notoriously private figure – was not involved in any wrongdoing and never had any association with gambling or bookmaking. 

Ohtani, who joined the Dodgers in the baseball offseason for a record 10-year, $700million contract, has always denied doing anything wrong. 

Mizuhara had worked with Ohtani for years and been a constant presence with him in major league clubhouses. When Ohtani left the Los Angeles Angels in December, the Dodgers also hired Mizuhara.

Mizuhara, who was still interpreting for Ohtani in Seoul where the Dodgers went to start the 2024 MLB season, allegedly placed bets on international soccer, the NBA, the NFL and college football.

Mizuhara initially claimed that Ohtani had wired the money to cover his debts.

Sports betting is still prohibited in the state of California and illegal bookmakers allow people to make bets on credit, whereas regulated sportsbooks demand payment up front. 

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