Former MLB All-Star Lenny Dykstra Faces Drug Charges After New Year’s Day Bust

Retired Major League Baseball player Lenny Dykstra was a passenger in a vehicle pulled over by Pennsylvania State Police on New Year’s Day in Pike County, where officers say they found drugs and paraphernalia. Authorities announced charges will be filed but did not specify teh alleged substances. Dykstra’s attorney said the car did not belong to him and that he was not accused of being under the influence; the lawyer added that any charges would be quickly resolved in Dykstra’s favor.

The report also reviews Dykstra’s long history of legal troubles: he served time after pleading guilty to bankruptcy-related fraud and to grand theft auto/false financial statements,pleaded no contest in 2012 to indecent exposure involving women he met via Craigslist,paid fines in 2019 after his company illegally rented out rooms,and had earlier drug and threat allegations dropped following an altercation with an Uber driver. A 2020 defamation suit he filed was dismissed, with the judge noting Dykstra’s reputation had already been widely tarnished. The article includes a notice that it may reflect the publisher’s editorial viewpoint.


Retired professional baseball player Lenny Dykstra faces charges after Pennsylvania State Police said a trooper found drugs and paraphernalia in his possession during a traffic stop on New Year’s Day.

Dykstra, 62, was a passenger when the vehicle was pulled over by a trooper with the Blooming Grove patrol unit in Pike County, about 25 miles (40 kilometers) east of Scranton, where Dykstra lives.

Police said in a statement that charges will be filed but did not specify what they may be or what drugs were allegedly involved.

Matthew Blit, Dykstra’s lawyer, said in a statement that the vehicle did not belong to Dykstra and he was not accused of being under the influence of a substance at the scene.

“To the extent charges are brought against him, they will be swiftly absolved,” Blit said.

Dykstra’s gritty style of play over a long career with the New York Mets and Philadelphia Phillies earned him the nickname “Nails.” He spent years as a businessman before running into a series of legal woes.

Dykstra served time in a California prison for bankruptcy fraud, sentenced to more than six months for hiding baseball gloves and other items from his playing days. That ran concurrent with a three-year sentence for pleading no contest to grand theft auto and providing a false financial statement. He claimed that he owed more than $31 million and had only $50,000 in assets.

In April 2012, Dykstra pleaded no contest to exposing himself to women he met through Craigslist.

In 2019, Dykstra pleaded guilty on behalf of his company, Titan Equity Group, to illegally renting out rooms in a New Jersey house that it owned. He agreed to pay about $3,000 in fines.

That same year, a judge dropped drug and terroristic threat charges against Dykstra after an altercation with an Uber driver. Police said they found cocaine, MDMA, and marijuana among his belongings. Dykstra’s lawyer called that incident “overblown” and said he was innocent.

And in 2020, a New York Supreme Court judge dismissed a defamation lawsuit that Dykstra filed against former Mets teammate Ron Darling over his allegation that Dykstra made racist remarks toward an opponent during the 1986 World Series.

Justice Robert D. Kalish said Dykstra’s reputation “for unsportsmanlike conduct and bigotry” had already been so tarnished that it could not be damaged further.

“Based on the papers submitted on this motion, prior to the publication of the book, Dykstra was infamous for being, among other things, racist, misogynist, and anti-gay, as well as a sexual predator, a drug-abuser, a thief, and an embezzler,” Kalish wrote.

The Western Journal has not reviewed this Associated Press story prior to publication. Therefore, it may contain editorial bias or may in some other way not meet our normal editorial standards. It is provided to our readers as a service from The Western Journal.




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