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Lenny Dykstra

February 11, 2012 by · Comments Off on Lenny Dykstra 

Lenny Dykstra, Sentencing for former baseball great Lenny Dykstra on multiple counts of grand theft auto was postponed to March after a judge said he is making progress in a drug and alcohol program.

“He is enrolled in a drug and alcohol program and progressing well,” commented L.A. County Superior Court Judge Cynthia Ulfig as she allowed Dykstra to delay his sentencing until March 7.

A car-buying scheme is one part of Dykstra’s legal woes, which include criminal charges involving federal bankruptcy fraud.

In January 2011, Dykstra, 48, his accountant Robert Hymers, 27, and friend Christopher Gavanis, 30, tried to lease high-end automobiles from several area dealerships by allegedly providing fraudulent information and claiming credit through a phony business, prosecutors said.

At two dealerships, Dykstra and Hymers allegedly provided information from a man who they said was a co-signer, even though they were not authorized to use his name. Prosecutors said Dykstra failed in his initial attempts to lease a new Mercedes Benz S-550 and a new Cadillac, but the men succeeded in obtaining a Ford Flex, a Lincoln and a Ford Mustang.
Dykstra was arrested April 14 by Los Angeles Police Department detectives while serving a search warrant at his Encino home. Authorities allegedly found cocaine and Ecstasy along with somatropin, a synthetic human growth hormone.

Dykstra was originally charged with five counts of attempted grand theft auto, eight counts of filing false financial statements, four counts of identity theft, three counts of grand theft auto and three counts of possession of a controlled substance.

In addition, he was charged with one misdemeanor count each of possession of a controlled substance without a prescription and unauthorized possession of a syringe.

New York Mets

February 11, 2012 by · Comments Off on New York Mets 

New York Mets, The New York Mets’ owners want the Supreme Court to decide whether only those investors who lost money should get a share of proceeds recovered from Bernard Madoff’s Ponzi scheme.

Sterling Equities Associates, which owns the Mets, on Feb. 3 asked the high court to hear the case. It will probably take months before justices decide if they will.

Thousands of investors lost billions of dollars before Madoff revealed his scheme in 2008. Judges repeatedly agreed with a trustee trying to recover money for investors that only those who lost their original investment can get a portion of what he recovers.

Trustee spokeswoman Amanda Remus says the Supreme Court should decline to hear the case because Sterling Equities is offering the same arguments that were already rejected by lower courts.

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