Rockies shortstop Jose Reyes was suspended through May 31, the second player penalized under Major League Baseball's new domestic violence policy.

Reyes agreed to the punishment and won't appeal, the league said Friday. The penalty stemmed from an alleged altercation with his wife at a Hawaii resort in October.

The Associated Press reported that the four-time All-Star will lose 52 days of pay, which amounts to $6,251,366 of Reyes' $22 million salary.

“I want to apologize for everything that has happened,” Reyes said in a statement. “I am sorry to the Rockies organization, my teammates, all the fans and most of all my family.”

The 32-year-old has not been with the Rockies all year.

Earlier this week, Yankees closer Aroldis Chapman joined the team after serving a 29-game penalty.

Discipline under the MLB policy, which was agreed to last summer after a number of high-profile incidents involving NFL players, isn't predicated on a conviction. Reyes had been scheduled to go to trial April 4 after pleading not guilty to abusing a family or household member. Hawaii prosecutors dropped charges before the trial date and said his wife was not cooperating.

Reyes is a career .290 hitter with 479 stolen bases in 13 seasons, and his contract with the Rockies runs through the 2017 season and includes a club option for 2018.

Rookie Trevor Story has filled in during Reyes' absence and has been one of baseball's big surprises. Story hit two home runs off Arizona's Zack Greinke on opening day and ranks among the big league leaders with 11 homers and 27 RBIs and a .266 batting average entering Friday.