The family of Los Angeles Angels pitcher Tyler Skaggs filed two lawsuits against the club and two former employees, claiming negligence over his drug-related death two years ago, attorneys announced Tuesday morning.
Skaggs’ widow, Carli, filed in Fort Worth, Texas, in the same county where Skaggs died, while Skaggs’ parents, Darrell Skaggs and Debbie Hetman, filed in Los Angeles. Both lawsuits were filed in state courts and do not specify how much money they are seeking. Under the states’ laws the deadline to file the lawsuits is Thursday, the second anniversary of Skaggs’ death.
In addition to the Angels as an organization, the family is suing former team communications director Eric Kay, who told authorities that he regularly purchased drugs for Skaggs, and Kay’s former boss, Tim Mead. The crux of the lawsuit is that the Angels were negligent in allowing Kay, a longtime opioid abuser, to have access to players, and that Mead failed to properly supervise him.
As ESPN reported in 2019, Kay told U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents that he also had provided oxycodone for five other players at Skaggs’ request. No other players have been publicly identified. The lawsuit claims that the Angels had a culture that pushed players to play through injury, and that the club either knew or should have known about Skaggs’ use of opioids.
Skaggs, 27, was discovered dead in his Southlake, Texas, hotel room July 1, 2019, after he had asphyxiated on his own vomit. A toxicology report showed that Skaggs had oxycodone, fentanyl and grain alcohol in his system. Kay, who left the Angels in late 2019, is facing federal charges for distributing fentanyl, and is scheduled for an August trial in U.S. District Court in the Northern District of Texas. He has pleaded not guilty.
“As you might expect, the decision to file these complaints has been a very difficult one for Tyler’s parents and his wife,” Rusty Hardin, the Skaggs family’s attorney, said in a statement. “Nothing will ease the pain and heartache of losing their only child and, for Carli, her husband and soulmate. But they want to get to the bottom of the circumstances surrounding Tyler’s tragic, untimely and completely avoidable death, and to hold the individuals and entities — including the Angels — accountable for the actions that contributed to it.
“As the federal grand jury indictment made plainly and painfully clear, were it not for the fentanyl in the counterfeit pill provided by Angels employee Eric Kay, Tyler would be alive today. And if the Angels had done a better job of supervising Eric Kay, Tyler would be alive today.”
When the U.S. Attorney’s office announced Kay’s indictment last August, its statement said, “It was later determined that but for the fentanyl in (Skaggs’) system, he would not have died.” Skaggs’ autopsy showed that he died by asphyxiation, however, not an overdose. When asked who had made that determination about the fentanyl and when, the U.S. Attorney’s office said it could not comment. A source at the Tarrant County Medical Examiner’s office told ESPN, “it wasn’t us.” The source said he was unaware of any other autopsy done on Skaggs before his body was cremated.
The Skaggs family’s lawsuits cite ESPN’s 2019 interview with Kay’s mother, Sandy, who said that she discussed Skaggs’ drug use with Mead just months before Skaggs died, while Kay was hospitalized for an overdose. Sandy Kay told ESPN that while she, Mead and Kay’s wife, Camela, were visiting him in the hospital, Kay received a text from Skaggs seeking drugs. Sandy told ESPN she saw the texts and told Mead that the team needed to intervene and get Skaggs “off his back.” The existence of that April 22, 2019 text could prove crucial to corroborating what Sandy Kay told ESPN.
According to two sources familiar with the investigation, Kay told agents that he first mentioned Skaggs’ use to Mead in 2017.
Mead, who spent 22 years as the Angels’ communications director, denied ever hearing that Skaggs was using drugs. “I have had a lot of conversations with Eric Kay about a lot of things, but opioids and Tyler Skaggs were not one of them,” Mead told ESPN in 2019.
Mead left the Angels in late April 2019, just a month before Skaggs’ death, to become president of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. He resigned from the Hall of Fame just two months ago.
Mead, Kay and an Angels representative could not be reached immediately Tuesday morning.
Kay told investigators that he and Skaggs had worked out an arrangement in which Kay would obtain drugs for Skaggs and himself, and Skaggs would pay for them. He told investigators that Skaggs had introduced him to a California man who provided the drugs, and that he and Skaggs regularly snorted opioids together. ESPN reviewed Venmo transactions alleged to have occurred between Skaggs and Kay, which showed a series of payments over two years ranging from $150 to $600.
As ESPN reported in 2019, Kay told DEA agents that a few days before Skaggs’ fatal road trip, he illegally obtained six oxycodone pills and gave three to the player, according to two sources familiar with his sworn statement. But Kay told DEA agents he did not believe the pills he obtained for Skaggs were the same ones the pitcher took the day he died. Skaggs also texted Kay the day the team left for Texas seeking more oxycodone, a request Kay told investigators he was unable to fulfill, the sources said.
Kay told DEA investigators that hours before Skaggs’ death in July, Skaggs was in his Southlake Hilton hotel room and texted Kay to visit him, according to the sources familiar with the investigation. Kay also told agents that Skaggs snorted three lines of crushed opioids in front of him, the sources said. Kay told agents he did not take any drugs despite being offered them by Skaggs, the sources said, because he was on a medication that would have negated the effects. A source who saw Kay around 3 a.m. on July 1 said players had been in and out of his room for much of the night, and that Skaggs had ordered “Jazzy wings” from room service.
Attorneys for the Skaggs family said his parents filed in California because only his wife is allowed to claim damages in Texas. The lawsuit is expected to seek damages for their loss, along with income Skaggs might have received from a future contract.