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MLB letter to New York Yankees about sign-stealing allegations to be made public, despite appeal

NEW YORK — A letter detailing a 2017 investigation into the New York Yankees will become a public document, two years after a federal judge ruled it should be unsealed.

The plaintiffs in a lawsuit over the daily-fantasy ramifications of electronic sign-stealing in baseball allege that a 2017 press release from commissioner Rob Manfred hid the full findings of what MLB discovered the Yankees had done. The letter's impending release will reveal any differences between what Manfred said in public about his findings and what was revealed in private.

Manfred wrote the letter to Yankees general manager Brian Cashman and it is alleged to contain proof of the team's sign-stealing methods from 2017, when New York was busted for improperly using a dugout phone and the Boston Red Sox were found to be using Apple Watches to pick up on signals from opposing teams.

A source told ESPN it will be at least two weeks before the letter is made public.

Yankees team president Randy Levine argued against the release of the letter in December 2020, saying that releasing the letter would raise «serious» privacy issues and that letters filed as confidential in the suit by the Houston Astros and the Red Sox weren't being made public. Levine also said that the letter would harm the reputation of the Yankees.

«The Yankees argue that the harm from the unsealing of the Yankees Letter will rise because its content 'would be distorted to falsely and unfairly generate the confusing scenario that the Yankees had somehow violated MLB's sign stealing rules, when in fact the Yankees did not,» the court wrote. «That argument, however, carries little weight. Disclosure of the document will allow the public to independently assess MLB's conclusion regarding

Read more on espn.com