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Man with Babe Ruth namesake accused of stealing MLB legends IDs in fraud scheme

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A Tennessee man who shares the same name as MLB legend Babe Ruth has been federally charged after he allegedly used the names of hundreds of dead or former pro baseball players in a wide-ranging scheme.

George Herman Ruth faces 91 counts in an indictment handed down in U.S. District Court in Greeneville, Tennessee, on Aug. 12, the U.S. attorney’s office announced. The suspect allegedly invoked Ruth’s name and the identities of other former baseball players in false claims for payouts in class action settlements, prosecutors said.

The 69-year-old Morristown man is charged with mail fraud, aggravated identity theft, fraudulent use of Social Security numbers, money laundering, making false statements to his probation officer and possessing firearms after having previously been convicted of felonies.

Per the indictment, Ruth obtained or attempted to obtain more than $550,000 through the scheme. He sought payouts in lawsuit settlements ranging from contact lens pricing allegations to claims of racial discrimination against a staffing agency, the filing said.

BABE RUTH ‘CALLED SHOT’ JERSEY SELLS FOR MORE THAN $24 MILLION AT AUCTION

Ruth opened more than a dozen P.O. boxes in several Tennessee cities for himself and for bogus companies. He then submitted hundreds of fraudulent claim forms to class action administrators across the country, according to the complaint.

Babe Ruth in a New York Yankees uniform

He used the names of old baseball players or variations of his own name, along with the Social Security numbers of unknowing victims, prosecutors said.

The names of the players Ruth pretended to be were not listed in the indictment. A public defender representing him declined to comment on the charges.

Babe Ruth

Ruth has been associated with identity theft in the past. He previously pleaded guilty in an Indiana federal court to a scheme to commit Social Security fraud. In 2020, he was sentenced to prison before going on probation from October 2023 until July 2025, court records show.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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