Puig ran a gauntlet of fast boats, Mexican drug smugglers and
even death threats in his 2012 flight from Cuba, according to a $12
million lawsuit filed by a man who accuses the ballplayer of
informing on him to Cuban authorities.
Puig has declined to comment on the allegations and his lawyer has
filed a motion to have the case dismissed.
"I'm only focused on being a productive teammate and helping the
Dodgers win games," Puig was quoted as saying in a statement issued
by his agent.
A rookie sensation with the Dodgers last season, Puig succeeded in
leaving Cuba two years ago by taking a boat to Mexico supplied by
smugglers connected to the Zetas drug cartel, according to the
affidavit of Yunior Despaigne, a Cuban boxer who fled the island
with Puig.
The affidavit is part of the lawsuit filed in a Miami federal court
by Miguel Angel Corbacho, a resident of Havana.
Corbacho alleges he was tortured and sentenced to seven years in
prison in Cuba in 2010 after Puig wrongly told police that he was
part of a conspiracy to smuggle the ballplayer off the island.
"Our client wasn't a smuggler," said Corbacho's attorney Kenia
Bravo, saying he was accidentally swept up in Puig's earlier efforts
to be smuggled out of Cuba.
Corbacho served more than three years in jail in Cuba and is now out
on probation.
Puig, now 23, tried several times to leave Cuba after he was banned
from Cuban baseball in 2009 for trying to leave the island
illegally.
Despaigne also accused Puig of being an active government informant,
and sending other would-be defectors to jail in exchange for
government perks.
According to Despaigne, a group of Miami-based smugglers put up
$250,000 to smuggle Puig off the island in exchange for a portion of
his future professional earnings.
Dozens of Cuban athletes, particularly baseball players, have fled
Cuba in recent years hoping to earn multimillion-dollar contracts
playing professionally in the United States or elsewhere.
Puig achieved that goal when he signed a seven-year, $42 million
contract with the Dodgers in 2012.
The details of Puig's mystery escape from Cuba were first reported
in the May issue of Los Angeles Magazine.
The plan was to first get Puig to Mexico where he could establish
residency and become a free agent to entertain higher offers from
professional baseball clubs, according to Despaigne's affidavit
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STUCK IN MEXICO
Once in Mexico, however, "smugglers concluded that Puig would be
worth more money and demanded that the Miami investors pay them
$400,000 which the backers insisted they did not have," said
Despaigne, adding the smugglers also threatened the
6-foot-three-inch Puig with a machete.
Puig, Despaigne and three others were held by the smugglers for
nearly a month in an Isla Mujeres hotel until they were rescued and
completed their journey to the United States, according to the
affidavit.
Despaigne, who ended up in Miami, said Puig paid more than $1
million to a trio of Miami men, though the smugglers went unpaid,
according to the affidavit.
"One of the smugglers, Leo, sent a man to come and find me and to
deliver a message to Puig," Despaigne said in the affidavit. "The
man pushed me up against my car and pressed a pistol to my liver and
told me to tell Puig that if he didn't pay them, that they would
kill him."
Despaigne said Puig took the story to one of the men who financed
his exodus from Cuba, who said he would have Leo "neutralized,"
according to the affidavit.
Puig went on to bat .319 in his first season with the Dodgers and
was the runner-up for the Rookie-of-the-Year award in MLB's National
League.
But his early promise has soured a bit this season as Puig's batting
average has slipped and he was benched by the Dodgers on opening day
for arriving late to the ballpark.
Off the field, police twice arrested him in 2013 for reckless
driving, charges that were later dropped.
(Additional reporting by Gene Cherry; editing by David Adams and G
Crosse)
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