Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic — Dominican authorities made a second arrest Tuesday night in the shooting of Boston Red Sox legend David Ortiz, but there was no public indication the man was suspected of being the gunman. Julieta Tejeda, spokeswoman for the national prosecutor’s office, told reporters via WhatsApp that a second arrest had been made in the investigation.

She declined to provide further details. CBS News partner Noticias S I N said a source told it five people were detained and were being questioned Tuesday night.Several people were in custody as of Tuesday afternoon, a law enforcement official told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to release details of the investigation.
Ortíz had his back to the sidewalk Sunday night at the Dial Bar and Lounge as a gunman — a passenger on a motorcycle — got off the bike, approached the 43-year-old and fired a single shot at close range before escaping.Enraged fans captured the 25-year-old motorcyclist and beat him bloody before handing him over to police. The gunman fled.Doctors in Santo Domingo removed Ortiz’s gallbladder and part of his intestines, and he was flown to Boston for further treatment Monday night, undergoing two hours of exploratory surgery.Ortiz’s wife, Tiffany, said in a statement that he was “stable, awake and resting comfortably” at Massachusetts General Hospital and was expected to remain there for several days. She thanked the family of Red Sox owner John Henry, the team and the hospital staff.CBS Boston reported that Ortiz took his first steps since the shooting Tuesday and remained in the Intensive Care Unit.”Today, he’s stable. He’s talking with his family and even took a few steps, aided by members of his family,” Ortiz’s longtime assistant, Leo Lopez, said in a phone interview with the station.The motorcyclist, Eddy Vladimir Féliz Garcia, had a 2017 arrest for drug possession.A police car carrying him drove up to a shipping container that was serving as a makeshift courtroom Tuesday evening and sat there for about a half-hour before driving off. Court officials said the hearing had been delayed because Féliz Garcia’s charging documents hadn’t arrived in time. He was brought back about 10 p.m. for charging.