Dayton Daily News

Rays’ Franco granted conditiona­l release while probe continues

- By Martín Adames Alcántara and Dánica Coto

PUERTO PLATA, Dominican Republic — A judge on Friday ordered the conditiona­l release of Tampa Bay Rays shortstop Wander Franco while he is investigat­ed for allegation­s he had a relationsh­ip with a 14-year-old girl and gave her mother a car and thousands of dollars in exchange for her consent, according to court documents obtained by The Associated Press.

The judge said Franco is allowed to leave the Dominican Republic but must return once a month to meet with authoritie­s. He also was ordered to pay 2 million Dominican pesos ($34,000) as a type of deposit as the investigat­ion continues.

Franco, who was expected to be released early Saturday, did not speak to reporters after the hearing ended. During a bathroom break earlier in the day, he briefly told reporters that “everything is in God’s hands.”

Supporters who gathered outside the courthouse clapped after the ruling and shouted “Boss! Boss!” in reference to Franco. Franco’s father, also called Wander Franco, exclaimed, “God is just.”

The 22-year-old All-Star is accused of commercial sexual exploitati­on and money laundering. The judge in the case, Rumaldi Marcelino, had several options for a ruling Friday: release Franco on bond, temporaril­y arrest him, prevent him from leaving the Dominican Republic or demand that he make occasional appearance­s until the investigat­ion or a trial has ended.

The girl’s 35-year-old mother, who faces the same charges as Franco, was ordered held under house arrest as the investigat­ion continues. She smiled slightly as she left the courtroom but did not comment. The AP is not naming the woman in order to preserve her daughter’s privacy.

Franco, who was detained Monday in the northern province of Puerto Plata, hasn’t been charged with any crimes.

The judge has received a nearly 600-page document detailing the evidence that prosecutor­s gathered during a monthslong investigat­ion.

The athlete’s lawyers have not commented other than saying that Franco was “doing fine.”

Prosecutor­s said the investigat­ion began after they received an anonymous tip in July 2023 stemming from someone who saw a media post alluding to the relationsh­ip. The AP has not been able to verify the reported post.

Authoritie­s accuse Franco of taking the minor away from her home in Puerto Plata in December 2022 and having a four-month relationsh­ip with her with consent from the girl’s mother.

They accuse Franco of sending the mother monthly payments of $1,700 for seven months and buying her a car “in order to allow the relationsh­ip and let her go out with him wherever she wanted,” according to the document, which quoted the girl.

The girl also was quoted as saying that she had demanded for a local digital media site to publish an item about her alleged relationsh­ip with the baseball player because she was “tired” of her mother, whom she accused of taking Franco’s money and not sharing any of it with her.

Days later, Franco published a live video alleging it was a scheme to extort money from him, the document stated.

In September 2023, authoritie­s raided the home of the girl’s mother and seized 800,000 Dominican pesos ($13,700) as well as $68,500 they said was found hidden behind a frame. Another seizure at a different home found a guarantee certificat­e from a local bank for 2.1 million Dominican pesos ($36,000) that they said was delivered by Franco for the “commercial and sexual exploitati­on” of the girl.

In addition, they seized a Suzuki Swift worth $26,600, according to the document. Authoritie­s noted that days before the car was bought, the teenager’s mother had the equivalent of $821 in her bank account. The mother also bought property in Puerto Plata worth $36,000, they said.

Authoritie­s also state that Franco’s mother had sent money to the girl’s mother, but she has not been charged in the case even though they said she got involved “to avoid traces of her son with the accused.”

Franco was having an AllStar season before being sidelined in August, when authoritie­s in the Dominican Republic began investigat­ing claims he had been in a relationsh­ip with a minor. Major League Baseball launched its own investigat­ion, placing Franco on the restricted list on Aug. 14 before moving him to administra­tive leave on Aug. 22.

 ?? RICARDO HERNÁNDEZ / AP ?? Wander Franco is escorted by police to court in Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic, on Friday. Dominican prosecutor­s on Wednesday accused Franco of commercial sexual exploitati­on and money laundering.
RICARDO HERNÁNDEZ / AP Wander Franco is escorted by police to court in Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic, on Friday. Dominican prosecutor­s on Wednesday accused Franco of commercial sexual exploitati­on and money laundering.

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