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Dodgers P Julio Urías arrested on domestic violence charges

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Dodgers P Julio Urías arrested on domestic violence charges


Los Angeles Dodgers starter Julio Urias was arrested on felony domestic violence charges late Sunday, Los Angeles police told ESPN, the second domestic violence arrest in the past four years for the soon-to-be-free-agent pitcher. Urías, 27, was arrested just after 11 p.m. PT and booked into jail around 1 a.m., according to jail records. He was released on $50,000 bond at 4:47 a.m. and has a court date of Sept. 27. The Dodgers posted on X, formally Twitter, that they are "aware of an incident involving Julio Urías" and that he is not with the team as it begins a six-game road trip starting Tuesday in Miami. In 2019, Urías was arrested on suspicion of domestic battery. While he was eventually not charged, he received a 20-game suspension under Major League Baseball's domestic violence policy. No MLB player has been suspended twice for violating the policy since its institution in 2015.

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MLB places Dodgers' Julio Urías on administrative leave


Major League Baseball announced it placed Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Julio Urias on administrative leave Wednesday, three days after police arrested the left hander on suspicion of felony domestic violence. The leave was imposed under baseball's joint domestic violence, sexual assault and child abuse policy adopted by MLB and the players' union in 2015 and can be the first step toward a suspension. Players are paid but cannot play while on leave; Urias is playing this season on a one-year, $14.25 million deal in his final season of salary arbitration eligibility. "They have to go through the process -- players' association, Julio's group," Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said in Miami. "Baseball is working through this." Urías, 27, did not travel with the Dodgers after his late-Sunday arrest outside BMO Stadium, where he had watched the Inter Miami-LAFC soccer game. He was taken into custody on charges of corporal injury on a spouse or cohabitant, which can be filed as a felony or misdemeanor. Department of Public Safety officers offered no details Wednesday on the circumstances of the arrest but asked for any witnesses with information regarding the incident to contact them. Urías also was on administrative leave in 2019 following an arrest for alleged domestic battery. While he wasn't charged, Urías was required to complete a yearlong domestic violence counseling program, and MLB suspended him 20 games. No player has been suspended twice under the league's policy, which was instituted in 2015.

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Report: Witness alerted police to altercation that led to Urías' arrest


Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Julio Urias was arrested after someone saw a physical altercation between a man and a woman outside a Major League Soccer stadium and contacted police, according to the arrest report released Thursday. The report by the Department of Public Safety provided details on Urías' arrest late Sunday on South Hoover Street outside BMO Stadium in Exposition Park, south of downtown Los Angeles. The report said DPS officers were patrolling outside the stadium after the soccer match in which Lionel Messi played in front of numerous celebrities. They were contacted by someone, whose name was not publicly identified, regarding a physical altercation between a man and a woman.
Urías posted $50,000 bail and was released early Monday. He is due in court on Sept. 27. DPS is handling the investigation and is asking for any other witnesses with information to contact it.

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Att: Charles J. Wilson aka. @blackfoot NAP ; @C-40

Subject: Cease and Desist - Disruptive Behavior


Dear Charles (@blackfoot NAP ; @C-40)

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Ex-Dodger Julio Urias won't face felony charges, DA says

The Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office determined Tuesday that it will not file felony charges against former Dodgers pitcher Julio Urias following his arrest on suspicion of domestic violence, writing in its charge-evaluation worksheet that "neither the victim's injuries nor the defendant's criminal history justify a felony filing." The case now will move to the Los Angeles City Attorney's Office for misdemeanor filing considerations. Major League Baseball, which launched an independent investigation into the incident, likely will wait until the city attorney's office rules before determining a potential suspension.

The California Highway Patrol's major crimes division spent the ensuing three months investigating the incident before handing the case to the district attorney's office on Dec. 11. The DA's office wrote in the charge-evaluation worksheet Tuesday that Urias pushed the victim against a fence and "pulled her by the hair or shoulders." As a young free agent with relatively few innings under his belt, Urias was widely projected to sign a $200 million-plus contract on the open market before the incident. Now, even in the absence of a criminal conviction, his MLB future seems to be in serious jeopardy.

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