Former Angels employee Eric Kay was sentenced to 22 years in federal prison for providing pitcher Tyler Skaggs the drugs that led to his overdose death in ...
Kay sobbed while one of his three sons spoke to the judge from the lectern in a plea for leniency. "We are very grateful to everyone who worked so hard to investigate and prosecute Eric Kay," the Skaggs family said in a statement. The judge interrupted Kay to quote the former public relations employee as saying in another exchange, "I'm here because of Tyler Skaggs. Kay said of the Skaggs family during a recorded call, "All they see are dollar signs. Kay was convicted on one count each of drug distribution resulting in death and drug conspiracy. Kay faced at least 20 years in prison on one of the two counts.
Ex- Los Angeles Angels employee Eric Kay was sentenced today to 22 years in federal prison in connection with the 2019 overdose death of Angles pitcher ...
“What the guilty verdict and sentencing proves is even if you sell only a small number of pills and one of those pills causes the death of an individual, you will be held responsible and sentenced to the fullest extent allowed by our judicial system.” “All they see are dollar signs,” he said of the Skaggs family. Kay had admitted to a colleague that he had, in fact, visited Mr. Skaggs had a mixture of ethanol, fentanyl, and oxycodone in his system at the time of his death.. Kay distributed the pills that killed Mr. Skaggs and to others, dolling out the pills at the stadium where they worked. Cron, Mike Morin, and Cameron Bedrosian testified at trial that Eric Kay distributed blue 30 milligram oxycodone pills to them as well. An analysis of the pill – which closely resembled a 30-milligram oxycodone tablet – revealed it had been laced with fentanyl, a powerful synthetic opiate. However, a search of Mr. Skaggs’s hotel room, investigators discovered a number of pills, including a single blue pill with the markings M/30. According to evidence presented at trial, Mr. Attorney for the Northern District of Texas Chad Meacham.
Eric Kay had been convicted in February of contributing to the death of the pitcher Tyler Skaggs by providing him with opioids.
A medical examiner and several toxicologists testified that it was the fentanyl in Skaggs’s system that led to his death. He and others portrayed Kay as a team employee who was known for being able to get players the drugs they sought, even as he dealt with his own addiction to pills. The trial, which had played out over two weeks in February, explored drug use among Major League Baseball players, several of whom, when testifying, admitted to acquiring opioids through Kay. The real issue in this case is holding accountable the people who are distributing the deadly drug fentanyl. “We are very grateful to everyone who worked so hard to investigate and prosecute Eric Kay,” the statement said. There was also no visible reaction from Skaggs’s widow and his mother or members of Kay’s family.
Eric Kay, the former Angels communications director who was found guilty in February of providing the drugs that killed pitcher Tyler Skaggs in 2019, ...
“And to hold someone else accountable for that is a great injustice.” An Angels spokesperson said in a statement Tuesday that “our compassion goes out to the Skaggs family on this difficult day.” Wynn and say, ‘Hey, you got this?’ And throughout the course of our representation, he apparently doesn’t like texts, because he never really got back to me.” “Eric Kay knew that the drugs he was giving to my son and other players [were] laced with fentanyl,” said Skaggs’s mother, Debbie, adding that “a strict sentence … Kay’s middle child, 20-year-old Carter, said during the sentencing hearing that his father “wouldn’t do something bad willingly” and urged the judge to be lenient. “The real issue in this case is holding accountable the people who are distributing the deadly drug fentanyl.” In a May hearing in Kay’s case, his other attorney at the time, Michael Molfetta, appeared to blame Wynn for having left Kay without representation during a meeting with probation officials before his sentencing. Kay’s attorney, Cody Cofer, said his client’s jailhouse remarks reflected the resentment of a man coming to terms with being separated from his family for two decades. “I know no matter how much time Eric Kay gets it won’t bring back Tyler,” Skaggs’s father, Darrell, said in a statement read in court by Tyler’s aunt. “I would text Mr. Kay has indicated he will appeal his conviction. In emails and phone calls, Kay referred to the “trash-ass Skaggs family,” derided the jurors as “rednecks” with missing teeth and referred to a federal prosecutor’s “horrible makeup.” Martin also noted that Kay was allegedly caught with suboxone while in jail.
The 27-year-old pitcher was found dead in his hotel room in Southlake, Texas on July 1, 2019 with traces of fentanyl, oxycodone, and alcohol in his system. Kay ...
Cron](/mlb/players/1894603/c-j-cron/), [Mike Morin](/mlb/players/2050371/mike-morin/), and [Cam Bedrosian](/mlb/players/1757977/cam-bedrosian/). Kay was [found guilty in February](https://www.cbssports.com/mlb/news/former-angels-employee-eric-kay-found-guilty-in-trial-over-drug-related-death-of-tyler-skaggs/) for the distribution of a controlled substance resulting in death and conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute controlled substances. These players included [Matt Harvey](/mlb/players/1765811/matt-harvey/), [C.J.
Eric Kay was convicted of distributing fentanyl and giving Skaggs the drugs that caused his fatal overdose in 2019.
During the trial, prosecutors repeatedly referred to an Orange County woman with a lengthy criminal record who allegedly sold Kay the pills that killed Skaggs and Carli Skaggs, who had been married to Tyler Skaggs less than a year when he died, called him her “best friend and protector” and broke down in tears when describing his outgoing personality lighting up a room. Molfetta.” During a hearing that month, Molfetta said the recording was made illegally but didn’t offer further details and hasn’t commented. His voice echoed off the walls. When the hearing ended Tuesday, Kay smiled and managed an awkward wave at family members through his handcuffs. Kay told police he hadn’t seen Skaggs since the team checked into the hotel the night before and didn’t know if the 27-year-old used drugs other than marijuana. He referred to them in one email as “fat, sloppy, toothless and unemployed.” Kay watched each speaker intently, head cocked to the side, but didn’t appear to react to the words. But the judge added two years to the total because of several disparaging phone calls and emails by Kay that authorities intercepted following his conviction in February. The marshals led him down a deserted hallway in the courthouse as he chatted them up. Means said he had been “dreading this day” because he feels the mandatory minimum of 20 years in federal prison Kay faced is excessive. They may get more money with him dead than he was playing because he sucked.”