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==Post-playing career== | ==Post-playing career== | ||
After he retired from baseball, D'Acquisto became a registered investment advisor. In D'Acquisto was sentenced to 63 months in prison for trying to pass off a forged $200 million certificate of deposit.<ref></ref> D'Acquisto was also indicted in 1998 on charges of defrauding investors of approximately $7 million dollars.<ref></ref> In May 1999 D'Acquisto was sentenced to four years and seven months in prison after he pled guilty.<ref></ref> | After he retired from baseball, D'Acquisto became a registered investment advisor. In D'Acquisto was sentenced to 63 months in prison for trying to pass off a forged $200 million certificate of deposit.<ref></ref> D'Acquisto was also indicted in 1998 on charges of defrauding investors of approximately $7 million dollars.<ref></ref> In May 1999 D'Acquisto was sentenced to four years and seven months in prison after he pled guilty later it was found out through court documents that John D'Acquisto was used by V.David Siniscalchi , Peter Verhoven, Herbert Giesselman and other affiliates who were arrested for fraud and used D'Acquisto to complete their tasks. All of the money that was said to have been stolen by John D'Acquisto was found in the hands of V.David Siniscalchi and Sheraton Asset Management and R.Jeffs Kollar. Mr D'Acquisto continually kept stating that he was not the perpetraitor of this crime and fell to deaf ears with regards to Security and Exchange Commission until 38 counts of his follwing indictment were dropped by the prosecution because the the prosecutions witnesses would not cooperate with the government any longer...In ther words they lied to say their own interests. John D'Acquisto was falsely accused by V.Davide Siniscalchi and his father in law who is a Senator Egbert,Senator for the State of Idaho. Both cases were used to place Mr. D'Acquisto in Jeapordy and it was a very well constructed and organized conspiracy to take all of the money from Mr. D'Acquisto's Trust position...A second type of case has th regards to Mr. Siniscalchi who is perpetraiting the same type of attack on a company out of Toronto Canada Reid vs Siniscalchi is were the Court case was files because of the companies domicile location. There was no fraud comitted by Mr. D'Acquisto and his court documents show this..Soask your self the question. How can a 39 count indictment be dropped to 1 count indictment. It wasn't because the government had an iron clad case it was because Mr. D'Acquisto and his attorney Frank Vecchione found the hiden agenda of these brokers and busted the case wide open.<ref></ref> | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 16:21, 23 June 2012
Baseball playerJohn D'Acquisto | |
---|---|
Pitcher | |
Born: (1951-12-24)December 24, 1951 San Diego, California | |
Batted: RightThrew: Right | |
debut | |
September 2, 1973, for the San Francisco Giants | |
Last appearance | |
October 1, 1982, for the Oakland Athletics | |
Career statistics | |
Win-loss record | 34-51 |
Strikeouts | 600 |
Earned run average | 4.56 |
Teams | |
Career highlights and awards | |
|
John Francis D'Acquisto (born December 24, 1951) is a former Major League Baseball player who pitched for six teams in his ten-year career that spanned from 1973 to 1982.
Baseball career
San Francisco Giants
D'Acquisto was drafted by the San Francisco Giants in the 1st round of the 1970 MLB Draft out of St. Augustine High School in San Diego, California. He made his Major League debut on September 2, 1973 against the Atlanta Braves, starting the second game of a doubleheader. He allowed 2 runs in 4.2 innings and did not get a decision. He pitched a complete game victory over the San Diego Padres on September 21 for his first career win. Overall he was 1-1 with a 3.58 ERA in 7 appearances (3 starts) that year.
D'Acquisto was named National League (NL) Rookie Pitcher of the Year in 1974 when he went 12–14 with a 3.77 ERA for the fifth-place Giants, but he missed most of the next season after elbow surgery. He tied an NL record with three wild pitches in one inning on September 24, 1976.
In 4 seasons with the Giants he was 18-27 with a 4.68 ERA in 83 appearances (64 starts).
St. Louis Cardinals
He was traded (with Mike Caldwell and Dave Rader) to the St. Louis Cardinals for Willie Crawford, John Curtis and Vic Harris on October 20, 1976. Due to his being on the disabled list, D'Acquisto only appeared in 3 games with the Cardinals with a 4.32 ERA.
San Diego Padres
The Cardinals traded him to the San Diego Padres on May 17, 1977 (with Pat Scanlon) for Butch Metzger. In 1978 he was switched to the bullpen (4–3, 10 saves, 2.13 ERA in 45 appearances). In 1979, D'Acquisto was put back into the rotation and had 51 appearances with a 9–13 record with 134 innings pitched and struck out 97 batters.
In 4 seasons with the Padres he was 16-21 with a 4.24 ERA in 152 games (26 starts).
Montreal Expos
On August 11, 1980 he was traded to the Montreal Expos for a player to be named later (Randy Bass). He made 11 appearances out of the bullpen with the Expos, with a 3.05 ERA.
California Angels
In 1981 D'Acquisto tested the free agent market and signed with the California Angels. D'Acquisto did not pitch much with the Angels (6 appearances) during the strike-ridden year and was subsequently sent to the minor leagues in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was brought back to the parent team in spring training and then released.
Atlanta Braves
After his release, he signed with the Atlanta Braves and was sent to Richmond AAA International League in 1982. He asked for, and was granted, his release on July 27, 1982.
Oakland Athletics
He signed with the Oakland Athletics under Billy Martin and pitched for Oakland for the rest of the 1982 season. D'Acquisto was part of the A's in spring training the next year also but was released on the last day of spring training.
Chicago White Sox
He was picked up by the Chicago White Sox and sent to Denver of the American Association.
D'Acquisto retired after arm surgery in 1983. In 1989, D'Acquisto pitched for the Bradenton Explorers and St. Lucie Legends of the Senior Professional Baseball Association.
Post-playing career
After he retired from baseball, D'Acquisto became a registered investment advisor. In D'Acquisto was sentenced to 63 months in prison for trying to pass off a forged $200 million certificate of deposit. D'Acquisto was also indicted in 1998 on charges of defrauding investors of approximately $7 million dollars. In May 1999 D'Acquisto was sentenced to four years and seven months in prison after he pled guilty later it was found out through court documents that John D'Acquisto was used by V.David Siniscalchi , Peter Verhoven, Herbert Giesselman and other affiliates who were arrested for fraud and used D'Acquisto to complete their tasks. All of the money that was said to have been stolen by John D'Acquisto was found in the hands of V.David Siniscalchi and Sheraton Asset Management and R.Jeffs Kollar. Mr D'Acquisto continually kept stating that he was not the perpetraitor of this crime and fell to deaf ears with regards to Security and Exchange Commission until 38 counts of his follwing indictment were dropped by the prosecution because the the prosecutions witnesses would not cooperate with the government any longer...In ther words they lied to say their own interests. John D'Acquisto was falsely accused by V.Davide Siniscalchi and his father in law who is a Senator Egbert,Senator for the State of Idaho. Both cases were used to place Mr. D'Acquisto in Jeapordy and it was a very well constructed and organized conspiracy to take all of the money from Mr. D'Acquisto's Trust position...A second type of case has th regards to Mr. Siniscalchi who is perpetraiting the same type of attack on a company out of Toronto Canada Reid vs Siniscalchi is were the Court case was files because of the companies domicile location. There was no fraud comitted by Mr. D'Acquisto and his court documents show this..Soask your self the question. How can a 39 count indictment be dropped to 1 count indictment. It wasn't because the government had an iron clad case it was because Mr. D'Acquisto and his attorney Frank Vecchione found the hiden agenda of these brokers and busted the case wide open.
References
- September 2, 1973 Braves vs. Giants boxscore
- September 21, 1973 Padres vs. Giants box score
- Giant pitcher faces surgery
- September 24, 1976 Houston Astros at San Francisco Giants Play by Play and Box Score
- Giants get Crawford from Cardinals
- Cardinals hurler on disabled list
- Cards swap for Metzger
- 63 months in prison for trying to pass off a forged $200 million certificate of deposit Ex-Pitcher sentenced
- D'Acquisto charged with defrauding investors
External links
- Career statistics from Baseball Reference, or Baseball Reference (Minors)
- D'Acquisto's page at Baseball Library
- 1951 births
- Living people
- Major League Baseball pitchers
- Baseball players from California
- San Francisco Giants players
- St. Louis Cardinals players
- San Diego Padres players
- Montreal Expos players
- California Angels players
- Oakland Athletics players
- People from San Diego, California
- Hawaii Islanders players
- Great Falls Giants players
- Decatur Commodores players
- Fresno Giants players
- Phoenix Giants players
- Salt Lake City Gulls players
- Richmond Braves players
- Tacoma Tigers players
- Denver Bears players