Baseball has a long history of its players cheating.
Spitballs, corked bats, interference, sharpened spikes, stealing signs, and performance enhancing drugs among those transgressions.
And sometimes, there’s cheating that happens off the field. And not just marital infidelity. There’s also the guys who try to cheat Uncle Sam out of his take.
So in honor of this April 15th – TAX DAY – here’s a look at Baseball’s biggest tax cheats. Well, the ones who got caught anyway.
Derek Jeter
In 2001, Jeter purchased a $13 Million Apartment in Trump Towers near the World Trade Center. Which would make you think he’s a resident of New York. But Jeter has claimed to be a resident of Florida since 1994 … I wonder if it’s merely a coincidence that Florida has no state income tax.
Well, the New York Department of Taxation and Finance didn’t think it was a coincidence, and in 2007 charged Jeter with evading three years worth of Taxes from 2001-2004. New york said that Jeter was indeed a resident of the Empire State and not the Sunshine State.
Jeter reportedly settled the case with New York in 2008. The terms and value of the settlement are unknown.
Barry Bonds
Okay this one is totally speculative and unofficial since the Feds didn’t include any Tax Evasion charges in their indictment of Bonds back in 2007.
But it was widely reported in 2006 that Bonds handed over at least $80,000 in ”possibly undeclared $80,000 in cash from memorabilia sales” to his mistress, Kimberly Bell. Bell said that Bonds “instructed her to deposit the money in amounts less than $10,000.”
My guess is that the Feds dropped the Tax Evasion charges because Bell was an unreliable witness – she’s got man-hands, after all.
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