An Orange County jury must sift through two months of evidence and testimony that provided a rare look at the darker side of professional baseball culture.
It's not just Tyler Skaggs' family and the Angels who have a lot riding on the outcome of the jury's decision. Insurers also are watching the proceedings closely.
Jurors on Monday heard closing arguments in a two-month civil trial over whether the Angels should be held responsible for ...
Deliberations in the Tyler Skaggs wrongful-death trial against the Angels got underway on Tuesday morning, Dec. 16, with ...
After two months of testimony and more than 40 witnesses, the high-profile civil wrongful death trial of Tyler Skaggs drew ...
The jury heard from a former MLB lawyer, ex-pitcher Matt Harvey, an addiction expert and others as testimony wound down this ...
Jurors heard conflicting testimony from two key witnesses Tuesday regarding the Angels' culpability and prior knowledge of ...
Opposing expert witnesses have testified about whether fentanyl alone would have killed the 27-year-old pitcher.
Defense questions Skaggs' widow and mother, aiming to show that pitcher wasn’t using opiates solely to deal with pain.
It may put the fan base in a state of shock, but the Los Angeles Angels are actually making baseball moves. They’ve hired a ...
Tyler Skaggs' relapse into opioid addiction was not evident to many of his closest associates, including his agent, who testified Wednesday, Dec. 3, in the wrongful death lawsuit of the pitcher who ...