Ohtani’s interpreter charged with bank fraud, stealing $16 million from ballplayer

Ohtani’s interpreter charged with bank fraud, stealing $16 million from ballplayer

Baseball superstar Shohei Ohtani’s former Japanese interpreter has been charged with stealing more than $16 million from Ohtani’s bank account to pay the interpreter’s illegal gambling debts, federal authorities announced Thursday, April 11.

U.S. Attorney for Los Angeles Martin Estrada said Ippei Mizuhara, who was fired by Ohtani’s current team, the Los Angeles Dodgers, was charged with bank fraud carrying a possible federal prison sentence of up to 30 years. His first court appearance is scheduled “in the near future” in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles, authorities said.

At a news conference in downtown Los Angeles, Estrada said Mizuhara had impersonated Ohtani in phone calls to the bank to authorize the wire transfers to a bookmaking operation. Estrada said Mizuhara in 2018 helped Ohtani set up the bank account in Arizona to deposit the ballplayer’s salary, so he was familiar with the codes and personal information to access those accounts.

Mizuhara allegedly told Ohtani’s U.S.-based financial professionals, none of whom spoke Japanese, that Ohtani denied them access to the account, authorities said.

Ohtani knew nothing of the fraud or gambling payments and was purely a victim, Estrada said.

“Mr. Mizuhara used and abused that position of trust in order to plunder Mr. Ohtani’s bank account,” Estrada said, adding that Mizuhara was feeding an “insatiable appetite” for gambling.

Mizuhara was fired by the Dodgers in late March while the team in was Seoul, South Korea, for two major league games after published allegations tied him to an estimated $4.5 million in payouts from Ohtani’s bank account to an alleged illegal Orange County bookmaking operation.

At the time, Ohtani’s attorneys issued a news release that the Dodgers superstar was the victim of “massive fraud” and that they were turning the matter over to authorities.

Mizuhara, a graduate Diamond Bar High School living in Newport Beach, told ESPN that he had paid the money through Ohtani’s account to an associate of alleged bookie Mathew Bowyer, a former exterminator and commodities trader who now operates a Brazilian jujitsu studio.

Bowyer’s attorney, Diane Bass, has said Bowyer dealt only with Mizuhara and never with Ohtani. But a source affiliated with Bowyer said the bookmaker allowed his associates to believe that Ohtani was doing the betting as a way of drumming up business.

In a later news conference, Ohtani told a worldwide gathering of reporters that he never gambled and that Mizuhari had lied to him and stole from him. Ohtani told the media that he was “very saddened and shocked.”

The source said Mizuhara bet on international soccer and professional football and basketball, not baseball, which is disallowed by the league.

Mizuhari was with Ohtani during the ballplayer’s meteoric rise in the big leagues and had become a trusted friend and interpreter. Ohtani took Mizuhara with him when he left the Los Angeles Angeles after six years to join the Dodgers on a 10-year, $700 million contract.

Mizuhara often caught for Ohtani in pregame warm-ups, battled with him in video games and made grocery runs for Ohtani during the pandemic.

In the aftermath of the gambling scandal, questions arose about Mizuhara’s resume, as cited in news stories and the Angels media guide. The Athletic reported that Mizuhara never attended or graduated from UC Riverside as stated in his bio and that he did not interpret for players in Boston and New York.

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