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Ugueth Urbina sentenced to 14 years in prison for
attempted murder...
In a very sad story, former Major League pitcher
Ugueth Urbina has been sentenced to 14 years in
prison for the attempted murder of five workers on
his family's ranch.
Urbina, a former pitcher with the Montreal Expos,
Boston Red Sox, Texas Rangers, Florida Marlins,
Detroit Tigers and Philadelphia Phillies, was also
found guilty of illegal deprivation of liberty and
violating a prohibition against taking justice into
his own hands during a dispute over a gun on Oct.
16, 2005, according to a statement from the Attorney
General's Office on Wednesday.
The 32-year-old free agent was accused of joining a
group of men in attacking and injuring workers with
machetes and pouring gasoline on them at his
family's ranch, located about 25 miles south of
Caracas.
"The ruling was too severe," said Jose Antonio Baez,
a former lawyer who represented Urbina.
Urbina repeatedly has denied involvement with the
violence, saying he was sleeping at the time of the
attack.
Urbina’s lawyer did everything he could to convince
the law that his client was innocent.
The pitcher's lawyer, Jose Luis Tamayo, has said
that Urbina surprised the workers by showing up at
his ranch that night while they were bathing in the
pool without permission. Urbina spoke sharply to
them, but later left and went to sleep, according to
Tamayo.
This is a very sad moment for baseball; Urbina was
one of the best closer in the Major League and two
times was selected for the All-Star Game. In 1999,
playing for the Montreal Expos, Urbina led the
National League in saves with 41. The Venezuelan
last pitched in the Major Leagues with the Phillies
in 2005. He's 30th on the all-time saves list with
237. He had two saves in the 2003 World Series for
the victorious Florida Marlins.
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