Pablo Torre Finds Out - The Secret World of Baseball Interpreters — and Shohei Ohtani

Episode Date: July 11, 2024

Before his best friend got him mixed up in the biggest story in baseball, Shohei Ohtani was a kind of child star caught in a state of arrested development. Enter the Japanese interpreter: part live-in... nanny, part spouse in a trans-Pacific shotgun marriage. Correspondent Tim Rohan takes us inside an intimate profession that's closing ranks, post-scandal. Turns out, actual translating isn't the half of it. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to Pablo Torre finds out. I am Pablo Torre, and today we're going to find out what this sound is. I feel like he's really trustworthy, so I felt really comfortable him being my interpreter. Right after this ad. You're listening to Giraff Kings Network. You motherfucker. Welcome to Parakeet Cortez Finds out. I am Parakeet Cortez, and today we're going to find out what this sound is.
Starting point is 00:00:39 You know that I'm in Miami. and that you had to zoom in from our studio. I did not give you permission to sit in my chair and certainly not wear my cardigan. Let me just tell you as much as I want to roast you for the cardigan, I get why you wear it every fucking show. Like, it's very comfortable. It feels expensive.
Starting point is 00:01:03 I don't want to take it off. It is expensive. I may not take it off. It fits me great. I'm filling it out in a way that you never have. Like your arms like would sink in this thing. That, okay, let's not get out of control here. I'm just saying it.
Starting point is 00:01:16 How does it smell? Not as bad as you would think. Thank you. Thank you. I've been trying to say this to our audience for almost a year. But the entire reason I even had you back on the show today is because there, in fact, is somebody else, Cortez,
Starting point is 00:01:32 who has been thriving in the absence of their own accomplice. One on, two out, one-one. Oh, Tani. Shohei Otani is the biggest star in baseball. The Major League Baseball All-Star game is on Tuesday. And he's an MVP candidate. And he's been doing amazing, amazing, without, you know, his interpreter, Ipe Mitsuhara.
Starting point is 00:02:04 Are you calling me your Japanese interpreter? Is that what you're doing that? I'm not not calling you that. I'm not not calling you my Ipe Mitsuhara, the banished Japanese interpreter who was, by the way, at the forefront of the largest scandal in baseball. Tonight, the stakes are rising in the scandal surrounding star L.A. Dodgers pitcher Shohei Otani, with Major League Baseball launching an investigation after illegal gambling allegations
Starting point is 00:02:27 involving Otani's interpreter and close friend, Ipe Mizuhara. The scandal broke when the LA Times reported that Otani's name came up in connection with a federal investigation into a sports betting ring in Orange County, a source telling NBC news that Mizuhara initially said Otani bailed him out of $4.5 million in gambling deaths. But Otani's lawyer saying the pitcher was the victim of a massive theft. This story, I got to be honest, bro, it did not play out how I expected, because I expected it to play out in the obvious manner,
Starting point is 00:02:57 which is, Othani knows about this shit. He's going to get in trouble. Obviously, he knows about this. Look at how much money was taken out. Right, millions of dollars, yeah. The reason it didn't play out that way, the way it played out, was, oh, Atani, he doesn't know any of this, because that helps MLB. Think about it.
Starting point is 00:03:12 So Otani right now, he's not pitching, he's only hitting this year. He's leading the National League at home runs. He's by far the leading candidate for MVP in the NL. He's the face of baseball. So on that level, you do have something of a point. And what I've started to do was go back and watch some videos of Shohei and Ipe together at all these press conferences they did. And there is one specific question that Ipe and Shohei both had to answer in their first spring
Starting point is 00:03:39 training ever. This was back with the Angels. And the video I want to play for you now is from 2018. Shohei, can you describe your relationship with Ipe and how you settled on him as your interpreter? I know you're involved in the process. I'm, I'm sorry to the relationship, why that's why the TIRP's to be able to, just me to explain to me. Uh, five-year-fighters to have been and I've really,
Starting point is 00:04:07 I've got to be very much, and so you can't get me, to me to be very good-sue in, I'm really very much more than I'm very strong-sue. Yeah, he's been working with me with the fighters for the last five years, and I feel like he's really trustworthy. So I felt really comfortable him being my interpreter. Really trustworthy, Cortez, is what Ipe Mitsuhara said in the third person while speaking in the first person about himself. While dressed as the second person next to him?
Starting point is 00:04:39 I guess you could say, I mean, what are we doing? They are dressed up and identical, like fully zipped up. Angel's track check. And the question was, just to restate it here, can you describe your relationship with IPE and how you settled on him as your interpreter? And that is the question that I mostly wanted to try and find the answer to here.
Starting point is 00:04:59 And so what I wanted to do was call up a third person, Tim Rohan, you know Tim, a guy... I remember Tim. A guy who has great hair as well. Unlike you. Yeah, he washes his hair. Very hygienic. He's an investigative reporter, former baseball beat writer for the New York Times.
Starting point is 00:05:17 And what I wanted him to help us find out was how much vetting a Japanese player like Shohei Otani actually does when it comes to selecting the person who does the interpreting for them. And also how you can possibly learn to trust somebody to do what turns out to be a uniquely and incredibly intimate job. I'll be your interpreter if you need one. That is not helpful to anybody. offering. Turn off my phone. Yeah. Are you just checking your phone to make sure someone else has not said no to you?
Starting point is 00:06:13 That's what the intrepid reporter would do. No, it's been, yeah, it's been weeks. It's been the only sort of assignment so far that you get. Yeah. Is the assignment where I say, can you get to the bottom of what is a fascinating story? And you realize that nobody wants to talk to you. But if you're a journalist, you want to ask questions and investigate stuff that maybe people might not want to talk about or might not want to answer for, right?
Starting point is 00:06:39 So this is what we do. You know, I'm used to it at this point. Okay, so the job of Japanese interpreter, which is a job that is unlike any other job in sports, how hard was it to get people to say even anything of interest to you? What was it like to try to report this? So first we made a list of, okay, who are some interpreters who want to reach out to? My thought process was, why don't we try to talk to people who maybe aren't actively still working as interpreters. We made a list, started reaching out to people. And I reached out to
Starting point is 00:07:10 seven interpreters, you know, people who've worked with Ichi Roe, Dice K. Matsuzaka, Hiroki-Koroda, Hideki Matsui. And of the seven people I reached out to, they either didn't respond or politely declined. The politeness of this, though, right? So when we had you investigate Rick Petino, different sort of genre of reply, it sounds like, when it came to a no. Yeah, these were the most polite nose I've ever received as a reporter. This is from Masahoshino, who worked with DiceK Matsuzaka. He said, quote, I'm honored by the opportunity, but I've made it a policy to avoid baseball-related media engagement in which I'd speak for myself.
Starting point is 00:07:50 I respectfully, and quite regretfully, as it sounds fun, decline your offer to chat. Kindly, Masa. And then another good one from Kenji Namura, who worked with Heroki Karoda. he said, quote, I appreciate you're reaching out to me. I'd rather keep my distance from this mess. My hope is that the dust settles soon so that we all can enjoy the game we love. Respectfully, Kenji. So these are very nice notes, yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:18 I mean, this job is under siege right now, right? I mean, because of the Ipe Mizihara scandal, this is suddenly in the news. Okay, so I should probably admit that the assignment we gave Tim was kind of like like cold calling a bunch of financial advisors and asking them how they are connected to Bernie Madoff because nobody wanted to be even vaguely associated with Ipe Mitsuharo,
Starting point is 00:08:44 whose entire existence now required a vigorous level of fact-checking. At one point, for instance, it was reported that Ipe, pre-shoe, had worked as an interpreter for former Boston Red Sox relief pitcher Hideki Okajima. But before the media could descend upon Boston,
Starting point is 00:09:01 the Red Sox quickly released a statement declaring that IPE was, quote, never employed by the Boston Red Sox in any capacity and was not an interpreter for Hideki Okujima during the pitcher's time with the team, end quote. But all this did was raise a new question for us, actually. If IPE did not handle Okajima with the Red Sox, then who was the person who did?
Starting point is 00:09:28 Jeff, thank you. Thank you for taking the time. It's nice to see you again. Of course, of course. Likewise. This is our guide into the remarkably cloistered world of Japanese interpreting, a guy named Jeff Cuddler, who is also known as the guy who actually did handle Hideki Okajima for the Red Sox. It turns out that Jeff was in Japan when he first got hired to work with Okajima and the Red Sox,
Starting point is 00:09:52 but he was born here in America. I grew up in Boston, the Boston suburbs, but spent a few years of my elementary years in Japan, which is the basis of my Japanese. I got really lucky. And Jeff, thankfully, was down to answer our questions on the record. And this was in part because he also had to figure out how to enter this world as kind of an outsider himself.
Starting point is 00:10:19 So Jeff was working as an interpreter for a Japanese rugby team. And after a while, he decided, hey, maybe I want to go back to the U.S. And a friend heard that Hideki Okajima was looking for an interpreter. Okajima was this pitcher who was about to move from Japan to the major league baseball.
Starting point is 00:10:37 And so this friend connected Jeff with Okajima and Okajima's management team arranged for an interview. And they met at a cafe in Tokyo. Jeff sits down with Okajima. And I was just curious, like, what does that look like?
Starting point is 00:10:50 Right. What kind of questions is Okajima asking him? Yeah, what's the vibe? He told me that he was impressed that I went in a suit. believe. So I think that impressed him, showed respect. So he liked that. At the end of the day, you spend so much time with an interpreter that becomes an important factor, whether you feel that you
Starting point is 00:11:14 can get along, spend a lot of time together. As Jeff came to understand, he was going to be spending a lot of time with Okajima. And so the thing that Jeff said that really stunned me was he said That meeting was probably less than an hour. I recall being quick, and I heard back a few days later that I passed and that I would be connected to the Red Sox for their interview. From there, the management team had Jeff meet with the Boston Red Sox. And Jeff said that was also a quick meeting too. And one of the most important, I guess, facets of that was the Red Sox just needed to make sure, hey, you speak English, right?
Starting point is 00:12:08 And so I just got to jump in here to note some of the basic math involved. Because while nobody but Jeff wanted to go on the record here, there was an interpreter that I wound up interviewing who agreed to help us fact-check all of this on the condition of anonymity. And what our anonymous interpreter kept on stressing was that a Japanese baseball player in America will spend spend more time with their interpreter than with their own wife. We're talking about roughly 300 out of 365 days together in close quarters, in cultural isolation, often on the road. And yet the fact that Hideki Okujima shacked up with Jeff after less than an hour of meeting him, less than an hour.
Starting point is 00:12:48 It's shockingly typical, I am told. In part because not that many qualified people want to be what amounts to the sort of sports au pair. a kind of bizarro live-in nanny who gets paid a starting salary, according to my source, a between $40,000 to $60,000 American plus benefits and possibly a visa or green card as needed. And so this whole profession, quietly, is this industry of trans-specific shotgun marriages. And in terms of paperwork and the qualifications required to do this job, something else is worth noting you, which is that the collective, bargaining agreement of Major League Baseball
Starting point is 00:13:29 requires every team to employ at least one Spanish language interpreter, and those standards for the Spanish interpreters are very specifically enumerated. The Spanish interpreter must be able to work long hours, including nights, holidays, and weekends, be able to travel both
Starting point is 00:13:45 domestically and internationally. The Spanish interpreter also should have a working knowledge of baseball, media relations, and baseball-related statistics. The Spanish interpreter should be certified as a translator by an accredited or have the equivalent work experience to fulfill the duties described herein. Now guess how many words MLB spends on Japanese interpreters?
Starting point is 00:14:08 None, zero. So it's kind of left to every team to decide how to hire these people. Yeah, I was asking around about this. Like, okay, so who does the interpreter work for? And it turns out every interpreter, even though they are the de facto new spouse of the player, they're employed by the baseball team that the player works for. Well, they have to be team employees because, as it was explained to me by an official with Major League Baseball, they want all interpreters to be team employees.
Starting point is 00:14:41 So they're subject to the gambling policy, the drug policy, the domestic violence policy. You know, if Hideki Okajima just has this guy hanging out and he's not an employee of Major League Baseball, Major League Baseball has no control over him, right? Right. This guy that you decided to get married to after an hour, is now hanging around the clubhouse. And oftentimes what Jeff told me is the team just kind of accepts, okay, this is who the player wants to be their interpreter. You're the interpreter.
Starting point is 00:15:08 That's why I think one of the most important aspects of this job in the interview process and figuring out, are you a good hang or not, right? Because we're going to be going to dinners, we're going to be hanging at the ballpark. You're going to be my buddy. You're together 24-7. So, you know, when life happens, you know, the interpreter is there to help out.
Starting point is 00:15:29 So in terms of like the pie chart of responsibilities here, there are like a million slices and how big is the interpreting part? Well, if you ask Jeff, it's really not that big. It's hard to define, but I would say maybe 1% is actually interpreting. The rest is more of a manager type of role, assistant type of rule. Obviously, I would be there with them at the ballpark, but afterwards, we'd usually go to lunch together, have dinner together. Yeah, really anything from making reservations, phone calls, buying a car, or conversations with agents, you know, any range of things that can happen in anyone's life on a day-to-day basis. A quick pause to acknowledge what Jeff Cutler just said there, which is that 1% of his job as a Japanese interest.
Starting point is 00:16:28 interpreter had to do with actual interpreting. 1%. And even the tasks Jeff began to list at the end there, they barely begin to cover the full range of actual responsibility. Because what my anonymous interpreter confirmed is that you are also expected to handle finding a place for the player to live, sorting out government forms like travel visas and driver's licenses for both the player and his family members.
Starting point is 00:16:54 Some interpreters apparently have even had to organize baby showers. others have driven the player and his wife to the hospital during labor. And in Jeff's case, with the Red Sox, as if his portfolio was not immersive enough, he also wound up adding a second client, starting pitcher Diceke Matsuzaka. And so Jeff was also in every conversation Diceke was having with the press, obviously.
Starting point is 00:17:25 I'm still far from my goal, where I want to be. So I'm just taking it day by day and do what I can each day. But I've been told by the trainers that my rehab is going well. So happy about that. But Jeff was also there for the conversations
Starting point is 00:17:42 Diceke was having with the trainers and the front office and coaches and teammates. And one day, Diceke Matsuzaki needed him for another position. Catcher. You know, he was describing how all of a sudden, here he is, playing catch with DiceK.
Starting point is 00:17:58 Zizaka, and there were occasions when Dyske, you know, would potentially want to work on a new pitch. And Jeff would have to crouch down and try catching a major league curveball. That feels like the metaphor here, right? Like, this whole thing is a curveball. And you're not quite sure what you're supposed to be doing exactly. It's very scary at first. It's not the easiest to catch when you're not used to that. So just trying to get your glove in front of it.
Starting point is 00:18:28 fighting for my life out on the ballpark yeah and he he was saying he was scared out of his mind because statistically again there just aren't that many other Japanese speakers on a baseball team in the sport
Starting point is 00:18:44 and so you wind up I guess if you're Jeff you know being entrusted with everything yeah you are you are the player's lifeline you are there at their beck and call Jeff
Starting point is 00:18:58 did tell me one story about a time when Dice K asked him, hey, can you go get my car washed? But it wasn't just any car. It was a Porsche Kyanne. And as Jeff described, it had a nice body kit on it. And so, you know, Dice K tosses Jeff the keys, say, hey, go take it for a spin. And if you've been to Fenway Park, you know, the streets around Fenway are pretty tight and narrow. That's like an advanced mode in a driving video game.
Starting point is 00:19:28 Exactly. Apparently, I went over a curb that I wasn't supposed to. And, of course, it damages the body kit. And I was like, oh, shit, what am I going to do? And panicked and just started driving the car. And just driving around Boston, right down store or drive for 10, 15 minutes before I was like, I got to get back. I got to get back. So you can imagine what's going through Jeff's head.
Starting point is 00:19:52 Yeah, I'm about to be fired. Diceke is going to kill me, you know, that I just damaged his poor. And long before, I get back and dice goes like, where were you? And I was like, I have something to tell you. It's probably easier if I just showed you. So he would go out to the garage in the FM way. And he was like, oh, I knew something like this. I knew this was coming.
Starting point is 00:20:19 All my interprets have done something similar with my car. So she was ready for it. And that was part of my initiation, I suppose. There's a strange form of intimacy here. Even as much as Jeff is learning that, like, I've had lots of you do this work. It is unusually and uniquely intimate. Yeah, I mean, think about the level of trust there, Pablo, right? The level of trust to drive you and your wife to the hospital when she's in labor.
Starting point is 00:20:49 The level of trust to find a place to live. The level of trust to go get your Porsche cayenne washed. Right. Is that a Hillary Clinton political slogan? Who do you want answering the phone at 3 a.m.? Someone tested and ready to lead in a dangerous world. It's 3 a.m. and your children are safe and asleep. Who do you want answering the phone?
Starting point is 00:21:10 You want Jeff. Yep. That's the job. Be on call 24-7. Yep, exactly. And they're also just like living this life together that like is not visible from the outside. Like no one else knows what Dice K. or Shohay Otani or you Darvish are going through except for this guy who is around them all of the time.
Starting point is 00:21:35 Yeah, I mean, if you've ever been in a baseball clubhouse, it's very, you know, clicky, right? Players hang out with their friends or, you know... They're countrymen. They're countrymen a lot of times. So naturally, you're going to bond. You're going to get close to one another, right? Which brings us back around to the reason why we were,
Starting point is 00:21:56 interested in the story in the first place, which is the most obvious and conspicuous, apparent abuse of this occupation, which what Ipe Mitsuhara did to Shohei Otani. So if that's how Jeff and Hideki Okajima and Diceke were operating, what was it like for Shoheyotani when he got to Major League Baseball? Jeff made the point that when both Diceke and Hadeki came over, they were both married, and their wives spoke English. So Jeff wasn't doing absolutely everything for them because they had wives at home. When Shohay Otani came over, he was 23 years old and he was famous. He was already famous.
Starting point is 00:22:37 He was already a huge deal in Japan. A lot of these guys are. But for Shohay, he was bigger than life coming over to a new country. So you can just imagine what it was like for him in finding an interpreter to help him navigate this new world. Most Japanese players can somewhat be naive, especially when they're younger because they've only played baseball their entire lives. And they were superstars from high school and if they went straight to the pros, superstars there. So they probably lacked some of the knowledge of daily life that most people kind of are forced to walk through. So that probably could have been.
Starting point is 00:23:22 And so I was curious. I wanted to know more about 23-old Shohei Otani. Yes. I wanted to know what was he like at that point. Why did he come over to the U.S.? Where was he at that point in his life? And what kind of help did he need transitioning from Japan to the U.S.? That's like a child star, effectively.
Starting point is 00:23:40 Exactly. And whoever he chose to be his interpreter was going to be there every step of the way. And so, you know, I reached out to someone who knew Otani back then, a Japanese speaker who could answer some of these questions. So I've mixed a lot of metaphors here, right? Like how these interpreters are spouses and managers and assistants, but with Otani, given that he has almost this child stardom from the jump, is also like a parental dynamic that I'm suspecting here with Ipe.
Starting point is 00:24:24 So what was the young Otani like, Tim? What did you learn about his arrival in America? So to learn more about that, I reached out to Dylan Hernandez. calling this for the LA Times baseball writer. Dylan is one of the best baseball writers in the country. And he is uniquely qualified to talk about this because, A, he's covered Otani since he came into Major League Baseball. But also, Dylan is the rare sports writer who can speak English, Spanish, and Japanese.
Starting point is 00:24:54 It's, you know, some would say it's his superpower. My father is from El Salvador. My mother is from Japan. I don't remember not being able to speak Japanese or not being able to speak Spanish. In 2017, around that time when Word was starting to pick up that Otani was going to come over,
Starting point is 00:25:12 Dylan went to Japan to report out a feature on Otani ahead of his arrival. During that time in Japan, Dylan followed a band of scouts who were watching Otani. And he spoke to all these people around him, like Otani's high school coach. And he learned a lot about just what it was like at that time in this kind of time in Otani's life when everything was about to change.
Starting point is 00:25:38 Dylan talked to the cab driver who would take Otani tune from the ballpark and Dylan asked him, well, what does Atani talk about? What's he like? He's like, he just talks about baseball. You know, if he's sitting with another player, you know, he might ask him, hey, do you remember your first home run? You know, after games, the other players might go out drinking and Otati wouldn't. and Dylan said that one of the other players asked Otani one, say, you know, don't you like to have fun? And Antoni's response apparently was, my idea of fun is getting a good night's sleep and playing well the next day. So he's a total nerd. He is a nerd. He's a baseball nerd is what I'm getting. Yeah, I mean, he's just focused.
Starting point is 00:26:15 What about his actual, like, family, his parents? What did they say about their son? So one story Dylan told me was apparently, you know, when Shohey's playing professional baseball in Japan, he's starting to make some money, you know, he decided, he's like, I'm going to have my parents handle that. So when he would get his checks for playing baseball, he set it up so the checks would go to his parents' banking account. He was like, you guys handle this. I don't want to deal with this. I'm focused on baseball. You guys handle all the money stuff. They were so concerned. He'll telly's mother was so concerned that he would grow up to be financially illiterate. Oh my God, like my son's going to not know anything about money.
Starting point is 00:26:52 So she set up a personal bank account for him and just dropped. than $1,000 a month just for some spending money. Here's your first bank account. I mean, we've all been there, right? Yeah, a training wheels version of adulthood. Exactly. And about a year later, she goes back to check the account. And the money's still there.
Starting point is 00:27:13 There's more money in there than she had put in because it had accrued interest. Shohay hadn't touched the account. Which is all to say that the psychological scouting report of young Shohai Otani suggested an ignorance, a kind of arrested development that only athletic precociousness can enable. Remember that Otani, at age 23,
Starting point is 00:27:36 winds up moving to America not long after his mom sets up that bank account. Otani, when he joined the Angels, had never lived on his own before. And so if you want a sense of how insanely non-strategic he was about his wealth, you should also know something else about the reason why Japanese superstars typically do not cross the Pacific
Starting point is 00:27:54 to join Major League Base Base Base at that young and age, even if they're an aspirational Hall of Famer, who's only discernible interest, by the way, is baseball. It's because coming to America at age 23, by rule, costs a prospect like Shohei Otani millions upon millions upon millions of U.S. dollars. We're talking nine figures in wealth. So when a Japanese player wants to come over to Major League Baseball, If they are 25 years old, there's two criteria.
Starting point is 00:28:29 If they are 25 years old and have six years of experience in a professional league, then they can come over and sign a free agent contract with a major league team. And there are no restrictions. You know, you just saw it with Yamamoto this offseason. The Dodgers new pitcher. He was 25 years old and met the criteria. So he came over and signed the richest contract ever for a pitcher. Exactly. Now, if you are not 25 or you don't have six years,
Starting point is 00:28:55 years of experience. You can't do that. You're restricted and you were treated as an amateur international free agent. If you decide to do that, then you have to sign a minor league contract. You're under team control for six years. Right. That means you have to wait six years before you hit free agency. And the team is limited by their international pool of how much signing bonus money they can give you. So that's what Shohay Otani decided to do. Yeah, I'm just kind of blown away by how utterly disinterested and therefore potentially arguably irresponsible Otani is being when it comes to the money he has available to him. You know, Dylan actually spoke to Otani's high school coach who actually sat down with
Starting point is 00:29:39 Shohei and had a conversation about this. You know, and I told him, you know, the coach was telling me, I told him, you know, if you wait two more years, you could sign for right there, you know, because he was hearing 200 million, 250 million, right? And the coach said he told Otani, hey, you're. an adult now. Like, I get the value of chasing your dreams. But, you know, you're an adult now and maybe you need to start, like, considering other things, not just baseball. And Otani said, no, I still want to go, right? And he wound up signing for a $2.3 million bonus. So basically, by, like,
Starting point is 00:30:13 going two years early, he theoretically punted on $250,000. Yeah, I didn't know this, Tim. The idea that Shohei Otani punted on a quarter of a billion dollars because he couldn't wait to play baseball in America? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like, what are you doing? I mean, look, you made lots of money otherwise, but it just, it's insane. Yeah, I mean, it's quite the decision.
Starting point is 00:30:41 But if you are focused on making the baseball Hall of Fame, you know, what is baseball other than counting numbers, Pablo? 500 home runs, right? Right. X number RBI, right? If Shohay wanted to get to the baseball Hall of Fame, maybe it was worth $200 million to him to get an extra two seasons, you know, of home runs in there. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:31:03 So I betray my own bias here, right? So I clearly am more capitalistically curious than Shohay Otani has ever been. And into this specific portrait walks Ipe Mitsuhara, a man who knows, it sounds like, more than Shohay, about how to move around dollars and cents. How do they even meet? So they met in 2013 when Otani was a teenager, when he was just starting his professional career in Japan.
Starting point is 00:31:46 Now, IPE was an interpreter for the Nippon Ham fighters. Just a great team name. Flash forward to 2017. So 2017 comes, O'Tani's made it clear. Words starting to get out that, hey, O'Tani's moving to Major League Baseball. And even though he's punting on $250 million, there's still a lot to come. Okay, so this is where I pause to acknowledge that you probably didn't read the affidavit that federal prosecutors filed back in April, in the case of the United States of America
Starting point is 00:32:16 versus Ipe Mitsuhara. And I say this because I myself did not read this. Not before assigning Tim this story, but the whole thing is worth it, as the U.S. attorney who brought the case explained. According to the complaint, Mr. Mitsuhara stole this. money largely to finance his voracious appetite for illegal sports betting. Our investigation revealed that Mitsuhara, a Japanese language interpreter, began working as a translator for Mr. Otani.
Starting point is 00:32:49 Over 37 pages. There are text messages and betting records and bank transfers, and all of it adds up to the case for an eighth-figure felony bank fraud, totaling more than $16 million over less than three years. What prosecutors allege is that IPE had illegally wired funds from Otani's checking account to this illegal bookmaker, and they said that IPE, in maybe the least surprising news of it all, had also lost a bunch of money on crypto. But the other thing that the complaint does is help fill in the gaps of how Shohei wound up officially hiring eBay, his future best friend in the first place, which is a little different from how Jeff Cutler got connected to Hadeki Okijima, and it's actually a little different from how Ipey
Starting point is 00:33:32 himself described his relationship with Otani in that video from 2018 that we played for you at the top of the show. Yeah, he's been working with me with the fighters for the last five years, and I feel like he's really trustworthy. So I felt really comfortable in being my interpreter. What you should know is that Ipe had not been individually working with Otani as his interpreter for the last five years since 2013. What Ipe had been doing
Starting point is 00:34:02 was working as an interpreter for Otani's English-speaking teammates on the Nippon Ham Fighters that it was only later that Ipe even sought out Otani himself to escalate their personal relationship. And so, according to the federal complaint, at that time, once word gets out that
Starting point is 00:34:22 Otani's moving to Major League Baseball, Ipe reaches out to Otani and asks him, hey, did you need an interpreter? Right, I heard you love baseball. Exactly. Allow me to help with the things you may like less. Yeah. And so that's how it happened.
Starting point is 00:34:36 And so then Otani comes over to Major League Baseball, and IPE turns into his de facto manager. Well, good afternoon and welcome to Sunny, Arizona. We thank you for attending today's media session with Shohei Otoni and his friend and translator Ipe Musahara. So a question off the field. So your food, it's hard to find Japanese food in the States
Starting point is 00:35:03 and do you have any food that you're missing and what kind of food are you eating daily and also today's Valentine's Day how many chocolates did you have? I'm quite I'm kind of and so you know, one of the first things they do
Starting point is 00:35:23 is in 2018 they go together to set up a bank account and so IPE and Shohey are there at the bank, and this bank account they open, it's basically to serve one purpose. It's to be the place where Shohay's checks, his paychecks from the angels are deposited. But even in this job, he's now, he pays already like accountant, you know, business manager, financial advisor. Like, that is the power vacuum. It sounds like he's stepping into. Well, there's actually people who had those jobs. You know, Shohei had an agent. Right, right. He's at CIA. Yes. And he had an agent at
Starting point is 00:36:00 CAA and the agent had financial advisor, an accountant, he had all these people on staff who were going to be Shohay's team, he's going to handle his money. And what we've learned now is that in all these meetings with the agent and with the financial people on Shohay's team, IPE was in these meetings. And I pay is the one doing the interpreting. He is the one essentially speaking on behalf of Shohay with all of these people handling his money. And, you know, one of the things that stood out to me in the federal complaint later on was the agent didn't have a Japanese interpreter on staff didn't hire one he was basically like well show hay's got ipe so we'll just use epe i mean it's not like you know uh this kid's mother thought that he might be financially illiterate or anything i'm sure
Starting point is 00:36:47 they got it under control that's that's the you know that's the gray area i don't know the answer to right like how how where was the agent of these concerns or how much do you defer because the whole point of this job of Japanese interpreter has been so established throughout time, decades and decades, of like, this is the guy who does the stuff. This is the guy we deal with. This is the person who everybody who's come over from Japan has trusted to do exactly this sort of genre of thing. Exactly. This is how things are done. And this is how things have been done for the last 20-plus years as more and more Japanese players have entered major league baseball. So the key thing, Pablo, is that IPE was there from the start. He was there.
Starting point is 00:37:29 when they set up the bank account. And he's there in all of these meetings with the agent, the financial advisor, the accountant, he's there. And that's like the behind closed doors stuff he's doing. What I remember Ipe being, as I was like watching this transcendent athlete show up in America,
Starting point is 00:37:49 pitching and hitting, I remember Ipe being the guy in like the dugout with the banks being Shohay's literal voice to America. But he was also, I presume is doing the baseball stuff that you would see, and we've heard from all these interpreters anonymously
Starting point is 00:38:05 and on the record. IPE is, he's doing all the stuff that Jeff Cutler was doing. He's doing the interpreting. He's with the teammates, with the coaches, with the media. But he's going beyond that. Like, IPE was looking at analytics. He was monitoring recovery timetables.
Starting point is 00:38:23 I mean, there was one anecdote in a Sports Illustrated story where Joe Madden was texting IPE asking if it was okay with Shohei to push his start back. So, you know, he's the intermediary for everything. For an incredibly visible and famous, but it sounds like, singularly isolated celebrity who has been, yeah, attended to as a young person by others for a very long time.
Starting point is 00:38:51 Dylan made the point that, you know, Otani seemed isolated from his teammates. And part of that was just given the unique nature of his... role. He's a pitcher and a hitter. So you can imagine he's got to get ready to pitch every five days. And there's Ipe next to him. And he's also playing catch with Shohei. He's also going through workouts. There was one story that they actually worked out together on Christmas one year. That's how close these two were. Christmas isn't baseball. Of course, we do baseball. Not only that, Ipe, you know, in some of these stories, Ipe was said to help manage Otani's off-season schedule with the marketing, right?
Starting point is 00:39:28 IPE then becomes famous just by proximity, just by being close to Shohay. I mean, I looked it up today. Ipe has almost 400,000 Instagram followers. That's so depressing. Can you imagine? Ipe's wife at one point found signed baseball from Ipe that was being sold on Japanese eBay. I was watching the Angels several years ago now, like wear shirts emblazoned with Ipe's face. I don't know if it was a joke.
Starting point is 00:40:01 The shirt's amazing. I mean, the photo is a glamour shot. It's like sun falling, you know, dappled light. He's in front of like a canyon bangs glistening. It's ridiculous. I asked Dylan, you know, what did the angels make a VP? Right? They're wearing these shirts.
Starting point is 00:40:20 He's around the team. He's basically a star in his own right. Like, what did the players make a VP? You know, there was one. opening day, Ipe got like a standing ovation, you know? And I asked O-Tani about that, you know, because he was warming up in the bullpen. He was the opening day started that year. I asked him like, do you see that? What do you think? And he tells him, yeah, I kind of didn't like it. You know, he was like joking around about it. And all of a sudden, this guy's like a household
Starting point is 00:40:46 name, not just here, but also in Japan. I am staggered by how in plain sight he was, while how private this part of the story remained only uncovered because of, yeah, hugely scandalous lawsuits that have shaken up the entire occupation that he was, you know, a part of. You know, we've been covering how close IPE and Shohei were, right? They're spending every day together, all day together. And apparently, according to this federal complaint, while that's happening, as IPE is getting closer and closer to Shohay,
Starting point is 00:41:21 he started stealing millions of dollars from it. So you remember that bank account they set up in 2018? So apparently, according to the federal complaint, from 2018 until 2021 for about three years, no one accessed that account online. You know how you can go on your phone and check your bank account? Yeah, you can an app or something. Three clicks away, you can check your bank account. No one did that for three years.
Starting point is 00:41:46 We talked about it. Shohay would just let his money sit there. That was his mom's nightmare. And then in late 2021, Epe's, starts gambling with this bookie, and he starts losing. And once IPE starts losing, suddenly the contact information on that bank account gets switched to IPE's phone number and to an anonymous email that's connected to IPE. Not only that, but when the bookie starts reaching out to IPE asking to cover his gambling losses, IPE starts accessing the account. And he starts transferring
Starting point is 00:42:22 money from this account where Shohei Otani is getting his paychecks from the Angels, and IPE starts taking money from the account to cover his gambling losses. The ex-interpreter of Los Angeles Dodgers star Shohei Otani is pleading guilty in his federal sports betting case. What is more, Mr. Mitsuhara lied to the bank to access the account. For instance, we've obtained recordings of telephone calls at which Mitsuhara spoke with bank employees, lied to them about being Mr. Otani, gave personal biographical information for Mr. Otani in order to impersonate him, and thereby convinced the bank to approve large
Starting point is 00:43:05 wire transfers of large amounts of money to the bookmakers. At one point, he lied and said that the transfer was for a car loan, but in fact it went to pay off a gambling debt. And then all of the IP addresses or the devices accessing the account were all linked to IPE. And a lot of these transfers that are happening are coinciding with text messages that IPE is having with the bookmaker who's saying, hey, where's my money? And, you know, it's also helpful to understand just how deep of a whole IPE was getting himself into. So IPE starts gambling at the end of 2021.
Starting point is 00:43:42 And he goes until January 2024 when this all blows up. in that time, IPE placed 19,000 bets, which is about 25 bets a day. Now, he won $142 million. That is a lot of money. It's a lot of money. But how much did he lose? He lost $182 million. So the net loss was about $40 million.
Starting point is 00:44:09 So he's $40 million in the hole. And what's IPE going to do on an interpreter salary? starts, according to the... Oh, right, he's an interpreter. He's an interpreter. He's not a player. He's an interpreter. And so, according to the federal complaint,
Starting point is 00:44:24 IPE would take money from the account to cover his losses, but the wins, he would take the money from the wins and put it in his own account. So much of the conversation around Otani, because, of course, Atani is the actual celebrity, has been, did he know? Did he do any of this? Was he part of this gambling problem that Ipe had?
Starting point is 00:44:42 Did he have his own gambling problem? How can you be so close to somebody and not know what your shadow is doing. And what you're seeing and what this complaint is alleging is that it was actually disturbingly easy for Otani to be isolated even from the most important financial matters of his own life. Where was the agent?
Starting point is 00:45:05 Where was the financial advisors that the agent employed? And what ended up happening, according to the complaint, was IPE told the agent that Shohei, wants that account private and he doesn't want anyone monitoring it. And the agent apparently didn't ask any questions and he didn't ask show hey directly. Because presumably, hearing from IPE is the same to them as hearing from show hey. Exactly. And so when other people in this, in this, in this, in this order bit, the financial planners raised questions are like, hey, what's going on with that account? The agent told them, hey, show he wants that private. Don't worry about it. Yeah. Is this thing that
Starting point is 00:45:41 has the whiff of suspicion to it? Is that actually just how their culture operates. Yeah, it's, you know, this is why all these interpreters didn't want to talk to me, Pablo. Yeah, I see, you know what? I see that now. This is why, because this is what could happen when you place so much trust in someone, but that trust is misplaced, right?
Starting point is 00:46:05 And they take advantage and this is what happens if the federal complaint is to be believed. Tim, thank you for taking another assignment in which you got a lot more, knows than yeses, but got us where we wanted to go. Maybe next time someone will talk to me. What do you think? I wouldn't bet on it, as it were. All right, so as I sit here, hovering over my keyboard, wondering what it is that I found out today, I realized that I should probably bring you behind the curtain, behind the blue cardigan, if you will, of this episode. Because what I am still stuck on, even after all of our reporting,
Starting point is 00:47:01 even after Ipe Mitsuhara's guilty plea, is this glaring and stupidly obvious possibility that Shohay Otani knew something. That, at the very least, he knew more about what Ipe was doing with his money than he wants federal prosecutors to know. And of course, I have zero proof that Ipe Mitsuhara fell on his sword in some elaborate plan to shield his best friend. But what I found out today is why either
Starting point is 00:47:31 option, unthinkable personal betrayal or unthinkable personal loyalty seems plausible. Because yes, in the world of Japanese interpreters, it is fully normal for a barely vetted stranger to be fully entrusted with an athlete's reputation and car and house and diet and curveball and family and bank account, let alone their voice. No job in sports entails this kind of servitude, and also this kind of power. But there is one more thing that my anonymous Japanese interpreter also told me, which is that most people can't handle that kind of intimacy, that kind of responsibility, for more than like three or four years.
Starting point is 00:48:19 Our own guide into this world, Jeff Cutler, is actually out of the business himself now, as is Ipe Mitsuhara, the man who publicly disgraced an unsustainably private profession. all because the trust he had with Shohei Otani was broken or unbreakable. This has been Pablo Toray finds out a Metal Arc Media production. And I'll talk to you next time.

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