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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Maggie Prosser

Jury deliberating fate of former Texas Rangers pitcher accused of sexual abuse

A Denton County, Texas, jury Friday is deliberating the fate of former Texas Rangers pitcher John Wetteland, who is accused of sexually abusing a young relative in the early 2000s.

The Rangers Hall of Famer is charged with three counts of aggravated sexual assault of a child. If convicted, he faces up to life in prison.

A relative accused Wetteland of forcing him to perform a sex act on him three times between 2004 and 2006, beginning when the child was 4 years old. The accuser said the abuse happened in the master bathroom shower of Wetteland’s Bartonville home, about 10 miles south of Denton.

Lawyers pleaded their cases to the jury for more than an hour Friday morning. The relative was flanked by family and Wetteland’s supporters sat on the opposite side of the courtroom gallery.

Wetteland’s defense team painted the relative — who is 22 and lives out of state — as a theatrical, “spoiled brat” who was manipulated by his stepfather to levy false accusations against Wetteland.

Prosecutor Rachel Nichols said the defense dragged the relative’s name through the mud over three days of testimony.

“He’s not this evil kid,” she said. “He didn’t want the world to know.”

The man testified Tuesday that he didn’t want to involve law enforcement. Instead, he wrote a letter, intended for only immediate family, disclosing the abuse. The man’s mother encouraged him to write the letter as a means of closure.

An investigation began after the relative’s high school learned of the abuse allegations in January 2019, according to testimony. District software flagged a letter written in Google Docs linked to the relative’s school-issued email.

Nichols said the relative had “nothing to gain” by coming forward with abuse allegations.

“It cost him almost everything,” she said, including his “family, his childhood, his privacy.”

Defense lawyer, Derek Adame, said the relative was “weaponized” by his stepfather, a man who Adame and witnesses have described as toxic and aggressive. The stepfather did not testify. Adame said the stepfather has always wanted to “destroy John.”

Wetteland, who testified in his defense Thursday, said he was the victim of a lie orchestrated by the stepfather. His mother testified that he has never recanted the accusations of sexual abuse.

Adame told jurors the relative was forced to write the letter and would have been punished if he didn’t. The lawyer also said the man’s testimony was “rehearsed.”

Prosecutor Lindsey Sheguit told jurors the relative and his stepfather no longer have a relationship. Wetteland’s attorney Derek Adame indicated in his questioning of a sibling of the accuser that the stepfather no longer believes the allegations. But it was unclear why and he did not elaborate.

Wetteland on the stand described his Christian, all-American home life and said he quit pro-baseball and coaching to spend more time with his family. But prosecutors said a back injury forced him out of the major leagues.

Outside the presence of the jury Thursday, prosecutors said, Wetteland suffered addictions to sex, alcohol, drugs and prescription pills. State District Judge Lee Ann Breading did not allow the testimony before jurors.

Sheguit called the defense’s narrative an “elaborate plan.”

“John Wetteland knew this day was coming,” she told jurors, “because there are some sins you can’t wash away.”

Wetteland spent 12 years in the major leagues, pitching for four teams. He was the 1996 World Series MVP with the New York Yankees and then signed with the Rangers.

He retired after the 2000 season, and his 150 saves with the Rangers are still the most in franchise history.

Wetteland was elected to the Rangers Hall of Fame in 2005 and held a coaching and front office position with the team in the early 2000s. He was a bullpen coach for several other teams. He also coached and taught Bible classes at Argyle’s Liberty Christian School in 2007 and 2008.

Though Wetteland is in the Rangers’ Hall of Fame, the club no longer has official ties with him.

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