Suspects offered $8,000 to kill baseball's David Ortiz

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[June 13, 2019]  By Jesus Frias

SANTA DOMINGO (Reuters) - The alleged shooter of David Ortiz has been arrested along with four others in a group offered nearly $8,000 to kill the former Boston Red Sox star at a Dominican Republic bar, authorities said on Wednesday.

The arrests came as Ortiz, 43, recovered in a Boston hospital following a second round of surgery on Tuesday, according to his family, which said he was sitting up and had taken a few steps.

The plot to kill Ortiz, a national hero in the Dominican Republic, was more complex than initially thought and involved two men on a motorcycle working with two other groups of people in cars, National Police chief Ney Aldrin Bautista Almonte told reporters.

Dominican Republic Attorney General Jean Alain Rodriguez identified Ramon Martinez Perez as the man suspected of jumping off the back of a motorcycle on Sunday night and shooting Ortiz in the torso.

Bautista said the group was offered 400,000 Dominican pesos ($7,830) to carry out the contract killing.

"It didn't just involve two people, more people took part," Bautista told a press conference.
 


Another man linked to the plot, Luis Alfredo Rivas Clase, nicknamed "The Surgeon" remained at large, Bautista said. Rivas Clase is also being sought over an April, 2018 shooting in Reading, Pennsylvania, local U.S. media reported.

Bautista declined to give a motive for the shooting or say who hired the attackers.

Ortiz, widely known as "Big Papi," is a sports legend in Boston for his role in three World Series baseball championships as well as his profane but inspiring remarks in the days after the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing.

He retired in 2016 after hitting 541 career home runs, which ranks 17th all-time in Major League Baseball.

Ortiz was shot while seated at an open-air nightclub in Santo Domingo, the capital of his native country. Ortiz's friend Jhoel López, a television host, was wounded in the leg in the shooting.

The Dominican Republic has one of the highest murder rates in the world, with most homicides committed during robberies, according to the U.S. State Department.

Police quickly arrested the suspected motorbike driver, identified as Eddy Féliz García, who was detained and beaten by bystanders at the scene.

The high-profile attack on Ortiz drew attention to a string of deaths of U.S. citizens in the Dominican Republic in recent months, as well as violent assaults.

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Boston Red Sox designated hitter David Ortiz celebrates his solo home in the sixth inning against the Toronto Blue Jays during their MLB American League East baseball game in Boston, Massachusetts, September 22, 2013. REUTERS/Dominick Reuter/File Photo

2ND SURGERY IN BOSTON

Ortiz underwent a first round of surgery in Santo Domingo late on Sunday before being flown the following day to Boston's Massachusetts General Hospital, where he underwent more surgery.

A trauma and acute care surgeon was leading the team treating Ortiz, his wife, Tiffany Ortiz, said in a statement on Wednesday.

On Tuesday "and this morning, David was able to sit up as well as take some steps," she said on Wednesday. "His condition is guarded and he will remain in the (intensive care unit) for the coming days, but he is making good progress toward recovery."

Féliz appeared in court on Tuesday evening, charged with being an accomplice in the attempted murder of Ortiz.

Justina García, the mother of Féliz who remained in custody, told reporters the charges against her son were a "lie."

"They can't link it to him because he is not a criminal," she said.

Solano said his client did not shoot Ortiz, but works as a motorcycle taxi driver and may have unwittingly driven the shooter to the scene, CNN reported.

Ortiz played 20 MLB seasons, spending his first six years with the Minnesota Twins before joining the Boston Red Sox.

(Additional reporting by Jonathan Allen in New York, Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles, Andrew Hay in Taos, New Mexico and Rich McKay in Atlanta; editing by Bill Berkrot, Gary Crosse and Simon Cameron-Moore)

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