


Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Julio Urias was being recorded during an alleged altercation with a woman that led to his arrest on Sunday after the MLS match in Los Angeles, according to the arrest report, which was obtained by ESPN.
Urias, who has been placed on administrative leave indefinitely, was arrested “on suspicion of corporal injury on a spouse or cohabitant” after officers from the Department of Public Safety spoke with those involved and concluded a physical altercation took place, the report said.
A bystander recorded the incident on a cell phone and authorities have that video footage, DPS assistant chief Chris Carr told ESPN’s Paula Lavigne.
The incident took place outside BMO Stadium in Exposition Park at some point after the LAFC-Inter Miami match — where Miami superstar Lionel Messi recorded two assists in front of a star-studded crowd, which featured Selena Gomez, LeBron James and Magic Johnson.
According to the report, DPS officers were already in the area when they received information from an unnamed person about a physical dispute between a man and a woman.
That’s when DPS officers investigated the matter, which led to Urias’ arrest.
Urias was released Monday after he posted $50,000 bail, according to ESPN.
The 27-year-old pitcher is scheduled to appear in court on Sept. 27.
In a separate report, multiple sources told TMZ Urias was seen shoving a woman into a fence at BMO Stadium.
The report claimed employees at the stadium “at first broke up the altercation,” before Urias “went into a nearby car with the woman,” where “things once again got heated.”
According to TMZ, police removed Urias and the woman from the vehicle and arrested him for felony domestic violence.
Urias was placed on administrative leave indefinitely by MLB under its domestic violence policy on Wednesday.
“We are aware of an incident involving Julio Urías,” the Dodgers said in a statement. “While we attempt to learn all the facts, he will not be traveling with the team.”
In a separate incident, Urias was arrested for domestic battery in May 2019 — when he was accused of pushing a woman he was with — and was subsequently suspended 20 games by MLB under its Domestic Violence, Sexual Assault, and Child Abuse Policy.
He was not charged in the incident.
The lefty, who last pitched on Sept.1, is a pending free agent.