Angels famous person Mike Trout testified Tuesday morning that he knew workforce worker Eric Kay had a drug drawback however that pitcher Tyler Skaggs confirmed no indicators of drug use.
Trout, a three-time American League Most Beneficial Participant, has performed with the Angels his whole 15-year profession and is below contract by means of the 2030 season. He was a teammate of Skaggs from 2014 to 2019, when the left-handed pitcher died in a Texas lodge room July 1, 2019, after snorting a counterfeit oxycodone capsule that contained fentanyl, a robust opioid.
Key, a former Angels communications director, was sentenced to 22 years in federal jail after being convicted in 2022 of offering the capsules that led to the Skaggs’ overdose.
In line with trial transcripts, Skaggs lawyer Daniel Dutko requested Trout about his response when he realized the following day in a workforce assembly that Skaggs had died.
“Cried,” Trout answered.
“You really liked him like a brother,” the lawyer stated as Trout nodded affirmatively. Trout added that he was unaware of any drug use by Skaggs.
Skaggs’ lawyer requested inquiries to elicit testimony from Trout that may humanize Skaggs, to determine that he was a valued teammate and pal. Trout stated he and Skaggs had been roommates in 2010 when each had been 18 years outdated and taking part in for the Angels affiliate in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
Trout, the highest-paid Angels worker making greater than $37 million a yr, attended Skaggs’ marriage ceremony in 2018.
Neither Dutko nor Angels lawyer Todd Theodora requested Trout why he didn’t inform a workforce govt or human sources when he suspected Kay’s drug use.
Skaggs was discovered lifeless in his lodge room in Southlake, Texas, on July 1, 2019, earlier than the Angels had been scheduled to start out a collection in opposition to the Texas Rangers. The Tarrant County medical expert discovered that along with the opioids, Skaggs had a blood-alcohol degree of 0.12. The post-mortem decided he died from asphyxia after aspirating on his personal vomit, and that his loss of life was unintentional.
Trout’s testimony adopted that of longtime Angels executives Tim Mead and Tom Taylor. Kay reported to Mead almost his whole 23-year profession and labored intently with Taylor, the workforce’s touring secretary. Each males testified that that they had no concept Kay was hooked on opioids or that Kay equipped Skaggs with medicine.
Skaggs’ widow, Carli Skaggs, and fogeys Debra Hetman and Darrell Skaggs are looking for $118 million from the Angels for Skaggs’ misplaced future earnings in addition to compensation for ache and anguish, and punitive damages.
The Angels announcement that longtime former large league catcher Kurt Suzuki was employed as supervisor coincided with Trout’s testimony.