Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Former Cubs Pitcher Found Guilty of Murder

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Former Chicago Cubs pitcher Daniel Serafini has been found guilty of first-degree murder. Serafini shot and killed his father-in-law in 2021, while also shooting his mother-in-law, who survived but died of suicide a year later.

Via ESPN.

The victims in the June 5, 2021, attack were Robert Gary Spohr, 70, who was found dead in a home in North Lake Tahoe, California, from a single gunshot. Also shot was his wife, Wendy Wood, then 68. She recovered from the injures but died by suicide one year later. The family cited the trauma of the attack as the reason for her death.

The incident began with a disagreement over a $1.3 million ranch renovation project that led to the murder of Gary Spohr. This crime is straight out of a movie as Samantha Scott was also arrested in connection to the murder. She pleaded guilty in February to being an accessory after the fact as Scott admitted that she drove Serafini to his in-laws home the day of the shooting.

Scott, who is still awaiting sentencing, was the nanny for Serafini and his wife Erin Spohr, was also romantically involved with the former MLB pitcher. Erin testified in court that she had an open marriage and was aware of Scott’s relationship with Serafini. She also testified that she did not believe Serafini murdered her father or shot her mother.

Via CBS.

Her sister, Adrienne Spohr, has been advocating for justice for her parents since the shootings.

“It’s been four years since my mom and dad were shot, and it’s been four years of just hell,” she said outside the courthouse Monday. “The Placer County District Attorney’s Office and the sheriff’s office never gave up.”

Serafini pitched for the Cubs during the 1999 season. A native of San Francisco, Serafini also pitched for the Minnesota Twins, San Diego Padres, Pittsburgh Pirates, Cincinnati Reds and Colorado Rockies during his MLB career.

The 51-year-old is scheduled to be sentenced on Aug. 18 in Placer County, California.

(Previous Update)

Former MLB pitcher Daniel Serafini pleaded not guilty to the 2021 murder of his father-in-law and attempted murder of his mother-in-law in his first appearance inside a Placer County courtroom in Roseville, Calif, on Tuesday. Serafini, 49, was arrested in October in Nevada and is being accused of killing his 70-year-old father-in-law, Gary Spohr, and trying to kill his mother-in-law, Wendy Wood, at their house in Lake Tahoe on June 5, 2021.

Though Wood survived the initial attack, she died by suicide in March 2023.

Serafini was arrested for the alleged crimes along with 33-year-old Samantha Scott, who was reportedly a longtime friend of Erin Spohr, who is Serafini’s wife and the daughter of the victims. Scott was also the nanny to Erin’s two children.

In another twist to this case, Erin’s sister Adrienne, suspected that her brother-in-law and Erin were responsible for the murder of her parents and had filed a lawsuit against them several months before Serafini was arrested.

The wrongful death lawsuit was filed on June 5, 2023, exactly two years after the shootings.

Via the San Francisco Chronicle.

One purpose of the lawsuit, reviewed by the Chronicle, is apparently to keep Serafini and his wife, Erin Spohr, from collecting inheritance money after the slayings to pay off hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt from his bar business. 

In the suit, Adrienne Spohr writes that she believed Serafini and her sister “caused, conspired to cause, or otherwise participated in causing, the premeditated and planned June 5, 2021, murder of Robert Gary Spohr and attempted murder of Wendy Wood, eventually leading to Wood’s death.”

Erin Spohr has not been arrested in connection to the shootings of her parents. In August, Erin filed a lawsuit against her sister Adrienne, accusing her of elder abuse and claiming that she manipulated their mother when she was vulnerable after the shooting.

Via KCRA.

“Adrienne isolated Wendy to facilitate her plan to exploit Wendy to divert all family assets for her own selfish benefit,” the lawsuit states.

It claims that Adrienne used undue influence to cut Erin out of the picture and take control of the parents’ estates valued at more than $10 million.

Serafini was taken with the 26th overall pick in the first round of the 1992 MLB Draft by the Minnesota Twins. The left-handed pitcher made his MLB debut with the Twins in 1996 and eventually retired from the sport in 2013. After his playing days, Serafini and his wife opened a bar called The Oak Tavern (formerly named The Bullpen Bar), in Sparks, Nevada. The bar was featured on a June 2015 episode of the reality TV show, “Bar Rescue.”

By 2017, their bar was out of business.

Serafini played for Minnesota from 1996-98, splitting time in the majors and minor leagues, before his contract was purchased by the Chicago Cubs. Serafini pitched for the Cubs during the 1999 season, making 42 total appearances that included four starts, while also making a pair of starts at Triple-A. Serafini also appeared in the major leagues with the San Diego Padres, Pittsburgh Pirates, Cincinnati Reds and Colorado Rockies, while also playing professionally in Japan, Taiwan and Mexico. He also had stints with the San Francisco Giants, New York Mets, Milwaukee Brewers, Anaheim Angels and St. Louis Cardinals, though Serafini never reached the majors with those organizations.

Following the 2007 season with the Rockies, MLB suspended Serafini 50 games for testing positive for a performance-enhancing substance in violation of the league’s joint drug prevention and treatment program. Serafini claimed he took the substance that was prescribed to him while pitching in Japan for medical reasons.

If convicted, Serafini could face a maximum sentence of life without parole or the death penalty.

Aldo Soto
Aldo Soto
With a journalism degree from Eastern Illinois University and a decade of Cubs reporting, my work has appeared on 670 The Score, ESPN 1000, and the Pinwheels and Ivy Podcast. I cover Cubs news and analysis for Sports Mockery, including roster moves, game breakdowns, and prospect development.

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