Tampa Bay Rays shortstop Wander Franco’s sexual abuse trial got underway in the Dominican Republic on Thursday only to get delayed until June amid confusion over the whereabouts of one witness.
Initial reports from El Nuevo Diario claim the delay resulted from the court’s inability to find a witness. Officials reportedly did not have the correct address, but it remains a mystery as to why this will cause a seven-month delay.
Now 23, Franco was having an All-Star season in 2023 before Dominican authorities began investigating allegations he had been in a relationship with a minor and paid her mother thousands of dollars for her consent.
The goateed Franco arrived at court in Puerto Plata alongside his lawyer Teodosio Jaquez, who has maintained that prosecutors do not have enough evidence in the case.
Franco has been charged with sexually abusing a minor, sexual and commercial exploitation against a minor, and human trafficking. He is currently on supervised release within his native Dominican Republic.
It’s unclear if this delay could allow him to return to the Rays as he waits for his trial to resume in June. An MLB spokesman did not immediately respond to DailyMail.com’s request for comment.
Rays shortstop Wander Franco, right, and his lawyer Teodosio Jaquez arrive to court
Tampa Bay Rays shortstop Wander Franco, left, sits in court with his lawyer Teodosio Jaquez for his trial on charges of sexually abusing a minor
After an investigation that lasted over a year, judge Pascual Valenzuela ruled in September that the evidence presented by prosecutors was worthy of the case moving to trial.
‘It’s a solid accusation and the court understood it,’ prosecutor Claudio Cordero said in September, according to the Associated Press. ‘The evidence linked the defendants to what’s described in the accusation.”
If convicted, Franco could face up to 20 years in prison. He’s also facing separate gun-related charges in another case in the Dominican and could face up to five additional years behind bars if convicted.
Documents that prosecutors presented to the judge in July and were viewed by The Associated Press alleged that Franco, through his mother Yudelka Aybar, transferred 1 million pesos or $17,000 to the mother of the minor on January 5, 2023, to consent to the abuse. The mother of the minor has been charged with money laundering and is under house arrest.
Prosecutors say that the minor’s mother went from being a bank employee to leading an ostentatious life and acquiring assets using the funds she received from Franco. During raids on the house of the minor’s mother, prosecutors say they found $68,500 and $35,000 that they allege was delivered by Franco.
After the hearing in September, Franco said ‘everything is in God’s hands.’ He has otherwise refused to speak to the media.
The trial will be held December 12 at a court in the northern province of Puerto Plata. His case will be heard by either three or five judges. There are no jury trials in the Dominican Republic. The judges will hear the arguments from both sides and the witnesses’ testimony, and then analyze the evidence and deliver a verdict. The trial could take up to eight months to conclude, based on the average duration of trials in the Dominican Republic.
Franco has been free on supervised release, although he had been required to make monthly control visits to the judge.
Wander Franco arrives to court for his trial on charges of sexually abusing a minor
Franco, 23, faces accusations of sexual and psychological abuse of a 14-year-old girl
He was also arrested and granted another supervised release in November for illegally carrying a gun in his vehicle. The arrest followed an argument in an apartment complex parking lot. Another man and a woman also were detained in the confrontation. Two firearms were seized, police said.
Dominican judge Viamerca Ruiz said Franco needs to report to court once a month while he is being investigated for carrying the firearm that was registered under his uncle’s name. One of Franco’s lawyers said because the gun has a license, ‘there’s nothing illegal about it.’
A conviction for illegally possessing a firearm could prompt a three- to five-year prison sentence.
No, but he was for nearly a year after Dominican authorities opened their probe.
Franco, who signed a $182 million, 11-year contract with the Rays in 2021, was briefly placed on the restricted list and then administrative leave in August 2023 when Dominican authorities opened their investigation. Because administrative leave is not disciplinary under the sport’s joint domestic violence, sexual assault and child abuse policy, Franco was paid during that time.
Technically, there is no leave during the offseason, and Franco was again placed on administrative leave at the start of the 2024 season until prosecutors filed the current charges on July 10 . At that time, MLB placed Franco – who had a $2 million salary in 2024 – on its restricted list, cutting off the pay he had been receiving under administrative leave.
He had been receiving 50 percent of his salary on administrative leave, a person familiar with his situation told the AP, speaking on condition of anonymity because that detail had not been disclosed publicly. That meant Franco accrued $559,140, or half of his salary for 104 days of the 186-day season.
MLB is likely to wait until the Dominican trial is concluded before deciding whether there will be any discipline.