A 16-year-old junior university baseball player from the New Mexico faces accusations and the season of his team is suspended after having pretended in the jug in the water of an opposing school.
Worse still, rival players may have consumed the contaminated liquid.
The student was not identified by his name, but the players of the Rancho High School Junior Baseball team of Rio Rancho had their season suspended in the middle of the current investigation.
The 16 -year -old accused faces 15 battery charges after alleging a water cooler belonging to the Cueva junior university baseball team. Dailymail.com contacted the Rio Rancho police for more information.
The officials of the Albuquerque public school would have made additional resources available to the Picuva players, according to several reports.
“We are happy that the authorities in Rio Rancho took this case seriously and filed criminal charges,” said a statement APS.
A stroke of the Rio Rancho secondary school baseball in New Mexico
“Scandalous behavior like this must be welcomed with rapid consequences to send the message that it is unacceptable and will not be tolerated. A large majority of athletes, coaches and parents in albuquerque schools, Rio Rancho and in all new-mexic, remain by a good sporting spirit, and we are convinced that an unhappy incident is an aberration.
This is not the first time that a new-mexic athlete student has been accused of urinating the property of a rival.
In 2023, the quarter of the state of the New Mexico, Diego Pavia, seemed to urinate on the logo of practice of new-mexic rival in a viral video.
In a scene surprisingly similar to the popular sticker of Calvin bumper ‘, images broadcast by Kob 4 showed that Pavia urinated on the artificial lawn while the person who turned the incident was seen by giving the finger to another lobos logo of the establishment.
During a later press conference, assistant coach of the state of the New Mexico state and offensive coordinator Tim Beck identified the Pavia as the video of the video, saying that he thought he had been shot before the season.
Pavia later apologized to her teammates from the New Mexico state and admitted that he had “learned a lot” of the incident.
“When the thing happened, it was a great distraction for the team, then I apologized to the team,” said Pavia, quoted by KTSM.com. “After that, I have the impression that we got closer as a group and since we were on a roll and that we play a very good football.”
The Pavia has since been transferred to Vanderbilt.