Two women testified to MLB about Trevor Bauer. Will their accounts be heard in court?
A San Diego woman alleges former Dodgers pitcher Trevor Bauer twice battered her. He denies it and claims she defamed him.
Bauer and the woman were alone at the time of the alleged incidents. Yet, in a civil trial scheduled to start in February, other women could provide key testimony.
Bauer is scheduled for his deposition Thursday, and his accuser gave her deposition earlier this week, an attorney for Bauer said in a hearing Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Santa Ana.
Pasadena police are investigating Dodgers pitcher Trevor Bauer over a woman’s allegation that he assaulted her. Bauer’s agent called the accusations “baseless” and “defamatory.”
The parties discussed the status of three other women who made similar allegations against Bauer, one who has agreed to a deposition and two who have not. The two women cooperated with Major League Baseball in its investigation of Bauer, and attorneys for his accuser had hoped Magistrate Judge Autumn Spaeth would order Bauer to turn over documents that would disclose what the women told the league.
Spaeth did not address that issue Wednesday but did say that attorneys for his accuser had not shown Bauer failed to comply with court orders about information he needed to disclose.
Testimony from other women could be relevant in showing a pattern of behavior in similar situations, Loyola Law School professor Stan Goldman said.
“If they have enough of it and it was close enough in circumstance,” Goldman said, “they might be able to argue it doesn’t fall under character, which is inadmissible, but falls under habit, which is admissible.”
In a court filing, attorneys for the accuser wrote she needed “critical and highly relevant” information from the two other women interviewed by the league about Bauer’s “alleged sexual assault of multiple women during his tenure as a pitcher with MLB.”
Complete coverage from the Los Angeles Times of Dodgers pitcher Trevor Bauer’s 324-game suspension from Major League Baseball.
The accuser required a court order, her attorneys wrote, because it is her “sole avenue” to obtaining the information. The other women declined to appear for depositions, her attorneys wrote, and efforts to get the information from the Dodgers and MLB were “unsuccessful.”
Bauer has denied he assaulted any women. He has not been charged with a crime.
In his court filing, Bauer’s attorneys said he complied with the accuser’s request for “statements, interviews and testimony” he provided in connection with the MLB investigation, aside from communication covered under the attorney-client privilege.
“To be sure,” his attorneys wrote, “MLB did interview Bauer in the context of the investigation, but that interview was not videotaped, transcribed or recorded in any way.”
Beyond that, his attorneys wrote, “Bauer will not produce any documents related to any interviews or investigation conducted by Major League Baseball for which he has a contractual duty to maintain as confidential or are otherwise protected from disclosure.”
Bauer was suspended under baseball’s domestic violence and sexual assault policy, which includes this sentence: “The confidentiality of player information is essential to the success of this policy.”
The policy explicitly forbids disclosure of confidential information aside from a handful of exceptions, including “where disclosure is required by law, including court order.”
If the league receives such a legal demand, the policy requires the league to notify the players union so as to “give it an opportunity to intervene and oppose disclosure of the confidential information.”
The Dodgers were right to release Trevor Bauer after his 194-game suspension for violating MLB’s policy on domestic violence and sexual assault.
Both the league and the union would be concerned about a precedent under which witnesses granting interviews with the promise of confidentiality might later find that confidential information provided to authorities. Of the 18 players suspended under the policy, Bauer is the only one to challenge his discipline rather than agree to a negotiated suspension.
After the league investigation, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred suspended Bauer for two years (324 games). An arbitrator later reduced the penalty to 194 games, still the longest for any player suspended under the policy.
The suspension cost Bauer $37.5 million of his $102-million contract with the Dodgers. The team released him last January rather than reinstate him to the roster for the final year of his contract, even though it owed him $22.5 million either way.
No other MLB team signed him, even with the Dodgers liable for the salary. Bauer is currently pitching in Japan.
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