Overview
- Philadelphia third baseman Alec Bohm filed a civil lawsuit Wednesday in the Court of Common Pleas accusing his parents of moving his money into LLC accounts they controlled and using it for personal expenses.
- Bohm asks the court for at least $3 million in damages, full control of the LLCs and an independent accounting to trace transfers from his personal and charity accounts.
- Daniel and Lisa Bohm, through attorney Robert Eckard, reject the claims and say he had access to the accounts while they even covered expenses on their personal credit cards.
- The complaint says the arrangement began in 2019 with two LLCs that gave his parents a 10% paper stake, expanded in 2024 for a real-estate purchase, and escalated in January when he requested statements and was told their time would be billed at $50 per hour.
- The case proceeds in Philadelphia as Bohm, 29, plays on a one-year $10.2 million contract and declines public comment, and a court-ordered accounting could clarify how much money moved and who controls the entities going forward.