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Skaggs' family, Angels head to court after talks fail
Los Angeles Times
|October 13, 2025
Team denies blame in pitcher’s death as the suit moves forward. Trial begins Monday.

FORMER ANGELS pitcher Tyler Skaggs died in 2019. His family alleges the team knew a staffer was supplying players with opioids.
(ROBERT GAUTHIER Los Angeles Times)
At its core, a civil suit is about money. Nobody pleads guilty. Nobody goes to prison. Somebody either pays somebody else or doesn't.
That’s why roughly 95% of civil suits nationwide reach a settlement ahead of or during trial, legal experts say. Pretrial discovery is usually comprehensive and mediation can produce agreements. Trials are costly, and plaintiffs and defendants alike overwhelmingly prefer to eliminate the risk of an all-or-nothing jury verdict by agreeing on a compromise dollar figure.
That’s also why the case brought by the family of deceased Angels pitcher Tyler Skaggs against the Angels has surprised some legal experts. A recent one-day settlement conference between lawyers went nowhere, and both sides are focused on a trial, which begins Monday in Orange County Superior Court with opening statements and witness testimony.
Skaggs was found dead in his hotel room in Southlake, Texas, on July 1, 2019, before the Angels were scheduled to start a series against the Texas Rangers. The Tarrant County medical examiner found that in addition to the opioids, Skaggs had a blood-alcohol level of 0.12. The autopsy determined he died from asphyxia after aspirating his own vomit, and that his death was accidental.
Former Angels communications director Eric Kay was sentenced to 22 years in federal prison after being convicted of providing the counterfeit oxycodone pills laced with fentanyl that led to Skaggs’ overdose.
This story is from the October 13, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
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