Keith Loh
April 30th, 2005, 11:25 AM
Heh. Guy fakes his way into events for over ten years. Major league events. Hardly anyone checks his credentials.
Path to broadcasting career ended in arrest (http://www.thejournalnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050428/SPORTS01/504280384/1108/SPORTS01)
Mark Sabia always wanted to be a sportscaster, so much so that he finagled his first press pass to a Giants game before he'd even graduated from high school.
Professionally, he was precocious and talented, outgoing and full of chutzpah, and when he finally tried to make a career as a freelancer, he brought his friends along with him: In exchange for their free labor as cameramen, Sabia took them behind the scenes at all of New York's professional sporting events.
The problems arose when Major League Baseball couldn't verify that Sabia's work ever hit the airwaves — and when MLB officials learned he allegedly was selling the access that his credentials conferred.
...
Path to broadcasting career ended in arrest (http://www.thejournalnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050428/SPORTS01/504280384/1108/SPORTS01)
Mark Sabia always wanted to be a sportscaster, so much so that he finagled his first press pass to a Giants game before he'd even graduated from high school.
Professionally, he was precocious and talented, outgoing and full of chutzpah, and when he finally tried to make a career as a freelancer, he brought his friends along with him: In exchange for their free labor as cameramen, Sabia took them behind the scenes at all of New York's professional sporting events.
The problems arose when Major League Baseball couldn't verify that Sabia's work ever hit the airwaves — and when MLB officials learned he allegedly was selling the access that his credentials conferred.
...