Mexico - Bad Sporters https://www.badsporters.com News Blogging About Athletes Being Caught Up Tue, 14 Jan 2020 18:58:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 New Mexico Player Arrested On The Charges Of DWI https://www.badsporters.com/2020/01/14/new-mexico-player-arrested-on-the-charges-of-dwi/ https://www.badsporters.com/2020/01/14/new-mexico-player-arrested-on-the-charges-of-dwi/#respond Tue, 14 Jan 2020 18:58:19 +0000 http://www.badsporters.com/?p=4889 Carlton Bragg Jr. Arrested New Mexico forwards Carlton Bragg Jr. was captured on doubt of driving drunk and ownership of under one ounce of weed early Sunday, hours after the Lobos beat Air Force. The capture comes nine days after Bragg, 24, was reestablished to the group following a three-game suspension while college authorities explored […]

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Carlton Bragg Jr. Arrested

New Mexico forwards Carlton Bragg Jr. was captured on doubt of driving drunk and ownership of under one ounce of weed early Sunday, hours after the Lobos beat Air Force.

The capture comes nine days after Bragg, 24, was reestablished to the group following a three-game suspension while college authorities explored sexual unfortunate behavior charges against him by another understudy. Bragg has not been accused in the association of that episode, which happened in August, even though the Bernalillo County head prosecutor’s office sent the case to the lead prosecutor’s office in Alamogordo, given an irreconcilable circumstance.

ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO - JANUARY 07: Carlton Bragg Jr. #15 of the New Mexico Lobos stands on the court during his team's game against the Fresno State Bulldogs at Dreamstyle Arena - The Pit on January 07, 2020 in Albuquerque, New Mexico. (Photo by Sam Wasson/Getty Images)
Source: MSN

These Were The Charges Against Him

Bragg, who is averaging 12.6 points and 10.3 rebounds in 15 games in his second season at New Mexico (15-3), was discharged from care later Sunday.

As indicated by a police report, Bragg went through a moderation checkpoint at 1:21 a.m. while driving a white BMW. Officials saw that Bragg “had red, watery eyes and a smell of liquor radiating from his facial territory,” the report said. “Carlton conceded drinking two glasses of wine between 9 p.m. what’s more, 10 p.m.”

Bragg was put through field balance testing, and “indications of weakness were available during his presentation of the moderation tests,” after which he was captured, and a modest quantity of cannabis was found on his body, the report said.

Bragg later would not calmly inhale liquor test, police said. It was not known whether he had a lawyer who could remark for his benefit. New Mexico is Bragg’s third school. He played at Kansas, where he was suspended after being captured and accused of battery against a lady in 2016, even though that charge was dropped. The lady who made the cases was later charged after examiners checked on observation video.

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Accused basketball player sues U. New Mexico for banning him from campus without a hearing https://www.badsporters.com/2020/01/13/accused-basketball-player-sues-u-new-mexico-for-banning-him-from-campus-without-a-hearing/ https://www.badsporters.com/2020/01/13/accused-basketball-player-sues-u-new-mexico-for-banning-him-from-campus-without-a-hearing/#respond Mon, 13 Jan 2020 13:10:50 +0000 https://www.badsporters.com/?p=4807 Second due process lawsuit against UNM in less than two weeks Joseph Caldwell, a University of New Mexico student, has been kicked out of campus housing, stopped from registering for spring classes, and banned from playing on the basketball team. His crime? He has only been accused of one at this point: battery. Caldwell “has […]

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Second due process lawsuit against UNM in less than two weeks

Joseph Caldwell, a University of New Mexico student, has been kicked out of campus housing, stopped from registering for spring classes, and banned from playing on the basketball team.

His crime? He has only been accused of one at this point: battery. Caldwell “has not been arrested or charged, much less proven guilty in a court of law,” according to a federal lawsuit filed against the public university earlier this month.

It’s not clear that UNM even has authority to investigate the allegation, the suit claims: The accuser is not a student and may not live in the state.

The taxpayer-funded university has not followed its own procedure to determine whether Caldwell (above) violated its code of conduct, the suit alleges. He was deprived a hearing where witnesses and evidence against him could be heard and challenged, as well as the opportunity to appeal.

MORE: Title IX investigation clears MSU basketball players of rape

Caldwell is suing the Board of Regents, the university-owned housing nonprofit Lobo Development Corporation and Dean of Students Nasha Torrez for violating his due process rights.

He also claims that board and Lobo breached their contracts with him. In return for Caldwell agreeing to play basketball for the university, “UNM has contracted to provide Plaintiff with access to its undergraduate degree programs.”

By preventing him from being able to continue his education, the university is not following up on its side of the bargain, the complaint argues. Lobo also “failed to honor its obligation of good faith and fair dealing” by breaking his lease.

It’s the second due process lawsuit filed against the university for a disciplinary investigation in less than two weeks. Prof. Nick Flor filed suit Dec. 31 after the university blamed him for a student’s attempted blackmail and suspended him for a year.

Due process lawsuit accuses University of New Mexico of illicit investigation into non-student’s claims by The College Fix on Scribd

Evicted for ‘unlawful action’ (without being charged with a crime)

On Dec. 19, Caldwell received an email from UNM notifying him that he was “hereby interim banned” from campus except to seek medical care and take his “in-person courses for Spring 2020 semester.”

The problem? At this point, Caldwell has registered for only one class, and this ban prevented him from signing up for any more that meet on campus.

The Albuquerque Police Department took a report on battery allegations against Caldwell three days earlier. The email stated that the allegations were “under the jurisdiction of the Office of Equal Opportunity” of the university, and that Caldwell would be unable to contact the dean of students’ office during the Dec. 21-Jan. 1 holiday break.

He met with the Office of Equal Opportunity briefly and denied the charges against him. Afterwards, Dean of Students Torrez “reiterated that he was suspended and that she would make the decision whether or not to continue his indefinite suspension at some unknown later date.”

The same day he was banned from campus, Caldwell received an eviction notice from Lobo requiring him to remove all of his belongings from his university-affiliated apartment within three days.

MORE: B-ball player says Yale ignored rules, evidence to judge him a rapist

It claimed that his “unlawful action causing serious physical harm to another person” violated the terms of his lease. According to his complaint, Caldwell has not been charged with a crime.

Four days after it served the eviction notice, Lobo forced Caldwell out of his apartment, even though he had been told he would not be evicted until after Jan. 3. The university would be open on that date, and presumably he could properly address the charges against him at that time.

The suit says Caldwell has not received a written complaint of detailed allegations from the university, any evidence or discovery regarding allegations, the identity or statements of adverse witnesses, or an opportunity to address the allegations with “confrontation rights.”

All are required by UNM’s own procedure before findings can be submitted to the dean of students.

Caldwell says that he “has had no opportunity to appeal any such findings, as there are none to appeal.”

MORE: Professor sues UNM for suspending him after student blackmails him

IMAGE: KOB4 screenshot

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Mexico https://www.badsporters.com/2018/06/15/mexico/ https://www.badsporters.com/2018/06/15/mexico/#respond Fri, 15 Jun 2018 22:21:30 +0000 http://www.badsporters.com/?p=4042 Marquez, 39, who is affectionately known as Rafa, has denied allegations that he and two associates used several businesses to hold assets for Raul Flores Hernandez, a drug lord allied with the notorious Sinaloa and Jalisco New Generation drug cartels. Source link

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Marquez, 39, who is affectionately known as Rafa, has denied allegations that he and two associates used several businesses to hold assets for Raul Flores Hernandez, a drug lord allied with the notorious Sinaloa and Jalisco New Generation drug cartels.

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Cuban Baseball Players Paid Smugglers Millions For Voyages to Mexico, Haiti https://www.badsporters.com/2016/08/17/cuban-baseball-players-paid-smugglers-millions-voyages-mexico-haiti/ https://www.badsporters.com/2016/08/17/cuban-baseball-players-paid-smugglers-millions-voyages-mexico-haiti/#respond Wed, 17 Aug 2016 23:18:13 +0000 http://www.badsporters.com/?p=189 Cuban baseball gamers paid a South Florida-primarily based smuggling ring much more than $15 million to depart the communist island in secretive ventures that included phony documents, false identities and surreptitious boat voyages to Mexico, Haiti and the Dominican Republic, federal prosecutors say. A just lately unsealed grand jury indictment against three men supplied new […]

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Cuban baseball gamers paid a South Florida-primarily based smuggling ring much more than $15 million to depart the communist island in secretive ventures that included phony documents, false identities and surreptitious boat voyages to Mexico, Haiti and the Dominican Republic, federal prosecutors say.

A just lately unsealed grand jury indictment against three men supplied new specifics about the smuggling of 17 Cuban players, amid them Jose Abreu of the Chicago White Sox and Leonys Martin of the Seattle Mariners. The smugglers took a percentage of any Major League Baseball contract a player signed.

The indictment names Bartolo Hernandez, a Weston, Florida-based mostly sports activities agent whose clients integrated Abreu Hernandez associate Julio Estrada, who runs Total Baseball Representation and Coaching in Miami and Haitian citizen Amin Latouff of Port-au-Prince, who is not in U.S. custody and remains in Haiti. They charged with conspiracy and illegally bringing immigrants to the U.S.

Estrada, who arrested final week, has pleaded not guilty and is free on $225,000 bail. Hernandez pleaded not guilty when initially charged in February and is also free on bond.

Estrada’s attorney, Sabrina Puglisi, said in an electronic mail Tuesday that he has by no means involved in unlawful human smuggling.

“He has always taken care of his players, education them so that they could achieve their dream of enjoying MLB in the United States,” she explained.

The situation is an outgrowth of the earlier prosecution in Miami of four men and women for the smuggling of Martin out of Cuba, 1 of whom is serving a 14-12 months prison sentence. Martin is amongst the gamers named in the new indictment as nicely. None of the players have been charged.

Prosecutors have stated the investigation is targeted on the smuggling organizations and not on the gamers. As Cubans, under U.S. policy they are allowed to continue to be in this nation once reaching U.S. soil.

As a portion of the thaw in U.S.-Cuba relations, MLB is in talks with the two countries’ governments on a likely deal that could make it less difficult for Cuban ballplayers to perform in the U.S. with no possessing to sneak away at global tournaments or threat large-seas defections with smugglers.

But starting in April 2009, prosecutors say, the South Florida-primarily based smugglers ran a flourishing and rewarding unlawful pipeline for Cuban players who should set up third-country residency to signal as MLB totally free agents.

The indictment says that Hernandez, Estrada, and Latouff “recruited and paid” boat captains to smuggle players from Cuba to Mexico, the Dominican Republic, and Haiti. The plot integrated use of fake jobs for the players, such as welder, mechanic, body shop worker — even a single who was named an “location supervisor for Wet Set Ski.”

The conspirators also employed fake foreign and U.S. documents, including falsified passports and visa applications, to get the gamers to the U.S., according to the indictment.

The case of Abreu, who set a White Sox rookie record with 36 house ran in 2014 and was named American League rookie of the year, is reasonably standard although the funds involved is higher than most.

In accordance to the indictment, Latouff paid $160,000 in August 2013 to a boat captain to smuggle Abreu from Cuba to Haiti. There a fraudulent visa and false title had been offered so that Abreu could fly from Port-au-Prince to Miami.

A brief time later, Chicago announced Abreu had signed a 5-year, $68 million MLB contract. But the court documents show he even now owed the smugglers hundreds of thousands and sent them several wire transfers in 2014 totaling close to $6 million.

Prosecutors are seeking forfeiture of much more than $15.5 million in total payments from ballplayers to the smugglers, as include a seizure of four pieces of luxury homes in South Florida, four Mercedes-Benz automobiles and a Honda motorbike.

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