A jury found former Angels and Orioles third baseman Doug DeCinces guilty on 13 counts Friday in a federal insider-trading case, the Orange County Register reports.

During the trial, prosecutors argued DeCinces used non-public information passed along by a Laguna Beach neighbor to make a windfall in a corporate merger while helping friends and family members do the same.

DeCinces reportedly cleared about $1.3 million when Advanced Medical Optics was bought out by Abbott Laboratories in 2008 for about four times the price at which the former company's stock was being traded.

David Parker, a friend of DeCinces' who also profited from the deal, was convicted on three counts Friday. The jury was deadlocked on charges against the man who provided DeCinces with the information, James Mazzo, prompting the judge to declare a mistrial.

DeCinces, 66, will remain free while he awaits sentencing.

He played in the major leagues from 1973-87, spending nine seasons with the Orioles and six with the Angels before wrapping up his career with a handful of games for St. Louis.

The third baseman won a Silver Slugger award and finished third in AL Most Valuable Player voting in 1982 as he established career highs in batting average (.301), doubles (42), home runs (30) and RBIs (97), among other categories. He was named to the All-Star Game for the only time in his career the following year.