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Ex-Yankees Outfielder From Early 1970s Gets 3 Years For Sexual Abuse

MINEOLA, N.Y. (CBSNewYork/AP) — A former New York Yankees outfielder who worked as a youth baseball coach was sentenced Thursday to three years in prison for sexually abusing an 8-year-old girl during baseball practice.

Rosendo "Rusty" Torres, 66, was convicted in July of five counts of first-degree sexual abuse. He was acquitted of sexually abusing another girl. Torres later tried to have the conviction overturned, claiming some jurors failed to disclose that they or family members had been crime victims or had been sexually victimized.

Nassau County Court Judge Tammy Robbins rejected the argument that jurors acted improperly.

Ex-Yankees Outfielder From Early 1970s Gets 3 Years For Sexual Abuse

"As a professional athlete, people looked up to this defendant and trusted him to teach America's favorite pastime to their children," District Attorney Kathleen Rice said in a statement. "Instead, he violated that trust and committed horrible acts against a defenseless young girl."

Prosecutors said the girl was abused by Torres while he worked as a coach for the Long Island town of Oyster Bay. The abuse occurred from April 2012 to May 2012 during baseball practice sessions in Plainview, prosecutors said. A town spokesman did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

Robbins said Torres never apologized or acknowledged the little girl, who has since moved with her family to Israel. Defense attorney Troy Smith said Torres "has maintained his innocence and still maintains his innocence to this day."

In a letter to the judge, the victim's mother wrote that her daughter wants to become a lawyer or social worker to help other children, WCBS 880's Sophia Hall reported.

Torres argued for probation in court Thursday, citing his battle with prostate cancer and his ailing wife.

"I don't believe in the justice system of the United States anymore," Torres' wife told Hall.

Torres, a Massapequa resident, played 89 games for the Yankees in 1971-72. He also played for four other teams.

He had a .212 lifetime batting average before retiring in 1980.

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