Current:Home > ScamsJulio Urías said he'd grow as a person. His latest arrest paints a different reality. -FundPrime
Julio Urías said he'd grow as a person. His latest arrest paints a different reality.
View
Date:2025-04-16 07:15:48
After Julio Urías was arrested in May 2019 on suspicion of domestic battery following an incident in the parking lot of a Los Angeles mall, the L.A. city attorney’s office said it would not file charges against him, as long as the Dodgers pitcher participated in a 52-week domestic counseling program and committed no acts of violence for the next year.
When Major League Baseball suspended him for 20 games for that violation of its joint domestic violence policy, the Dodgers lauded the league’s action and said that “we are also encouraged that Julio has taken responsibility for his actions and believe he will take the necessary steps to learn from this incident.”
And Urías himself, while noting the incident had “no injury or history of violence,” said he understood major leaguers must be held to a higher standard. And that he’d “taken proactive steps to help me grow as a person on and off the field, and in my relationships.”
What a sad, sickening failure.
Sunday night, Urías was arrested and charged with felony corporal injury against a spouse, according to the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department, citing an incident in the parking lot of BMO Stadium, where Urías and many other luminaries came to watch Lionel Messi and Inter Miami play soccer.
FOLLOW THE MONEY: MLB player salaries and payrolls for every major league team
And so, the well-worn process of MLB’s domestic violence adjudication begins again.
An investigation has begun. Administrative leave typically follows. Charges may stick or be dropped, often hinging on the desire or capacity of the alleged victim to cooperate with authorities. A suspension from MLB is close to a near certainty, given the circumstances and past precedent.
DODGERS:Pitcher Julio Urías arrested on felony domestic violence charge
But this incident feels far different than any in the eight years of MLB and the Players’ Association’s joint policy. Because Urías is the first repeat offender.
The point of the policy is not just to hold the perpetrator to account. Above all, it is to protect the victim, and, for the offending party, to strike a balance between punishment and rehabilitation.
It’s tempting to say those around Urías failed him. That the legally mandated counseling failed. That Urías’ professional representatives, his team, his union, his league – they somehow did not install the appropriate guardrails to guide Urías toward the personal growth he’d claimed to embrace some four years ago.
But let’s get real: Urías is 27 years old. He’s nearly a decade removed from the 16-year-old kid the Dodgers plucked out of Culiacán, Mexico, and considerably older than the 23-year-old whose conduct with a partner in the parking lot of the Beverly Center attracted the attention and concern of bystanders and ultimately law enforcement.
That both arrests occurred due to public conduct is alarming. At best, it suggests a brazen and invulnerable mentality; at worst, it jogs the mind to ponder Urías’ conduct away from the public eye.
Soon enough, Urías will feel the significant professional ramifications of his behavior.
If past cases are any guidance, Urías will not pitch again this year for the first-place Dodgers. It would not be a stretch to suggest he might have received a contract approaching $100 million this offseason. While he’s struggled to a 4.60 ERA this year, he was third in National League Cy Young voting a year ago, went a combined 37-10 with a 2.57 ERA in 2021 and ’22, and recorded the last seven outs of the Dodgers’ clinching Game 6 of the 2020 World Series.
All that came under the presumption that Urías had learned from his transgressions, that his partner was safe, that he was worthy of the very privilege he spoke of that comes with pitching in the major leagues.
Now, fans may never believe that again.
This case represents a crucial precedent for MLB commissioner Rob Manfred; if police and witness accounts and an investigation confirm a violation occurred, he must for the first time weigh the penalty of a second strike under the domestic violence policy. For now, Urías faces a Sept. 27 date in Los Angeles Municipal Court.
Yet regardless Manfred’s decision – and any suspension would likely stretch well into the 2024 season – Urías’ future is very much in doubt. His former teammate, Trevor Bauer, certainly learned an athlete reaches a point where his conduct cancels out his talent, where the paying customer cannot bear the sight of him in uniform, regardless of worth to the team.
Urías might have reached that point Sunday night. And now his greatest contribution to the game might not be from the mound but as a cautionary tale that there’s no guarantee an alleged abuser can rehabilitate themselves.
Even if they say all the right things.
veryGood! (98357)
Related
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Lawmakers to vote on censuring Rep. Jamaal Bowman for pulling a fire alarm in House office building
- A survivor is pulled out of a Zambian mine nearly a week after being trapped. Dozens remain missing
- Democratic support for Biden ticks up on handling of Israel-Hamas war, AP-NORC poll says
- How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
- Mexico focuses on looking for people falsely listed as missing, ignores thousands of disappeared
- White House delays menthol cigarette ban, alarming anti-smoking advocates
- Trump tells supporters, ‘Guard the vote.’ Here’s the phrase’s backstory and why it’s raising concern
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- J Balvin returns to his reggaeton roots on the romantic ‘Amigos’ — and no, it is not about Bad Bunny
Ranking
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Why Matt Bomer Stands by His Decision to Pass on Barbie Role
- Sundance Film Festival 2024 lineup features Kristen Stewart, Saoirse Ronan, Steven Yeun, more
- How to decorate for the holidays, according to a 20-year interior design veteran
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- Biden urges Congress to pass Ukraine funding now: This cannot wait
- Divides over trade and Ukraine are in focus as EU and China’s leaders meet in Beijing
- Lawsuit accuses Sean Combs, 2 others of raping 17-year-old girl in 2003; Combs denies allegations
Recommendation
New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
AP PHOTOS: In 2023, calamities of war and disaster were unleashed again on an unsettled Middle East
UNLV shooting suspect dead after 3 killed on campus, Las Vegas police say
Robert Pattinson and Suki Waterhouse Make First Public Appearance Together Since Pregnancy Reveal
NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
SAG-AFTRA members approve labor deal with Hollywood studios
'I know all of the ways that things could go wrong.' Pregnancy loss in post-Dobbs America
A simpler FAFSA's coming. But it won't necessarily make getting money easier. Here's why.