I think you'll see suspensions, a fine, and maybe a lost draft pick or two.
Really doubt it. Based on something maybe giving an edge that is only a slightly modified form of what every other team already does?
There's a reason why the Red Sox could instantaneously turn around a similar claim against the Yankees. Meanwhile the Yankees had to break the very rule the Red Sox supposedly broke (no connected electronics) to provide what their attempt at evidence.
And that evidence somehow requires signals from the dugout to be relayed to the batter literally in the interval between the sign being given and the pitch being thrown.
It's dubious and the previously dismissed claim quoted in this thread shows pretty well where this, and in fact all recent Boston sports cheating allegations come from, teams why can't beat 'em throwing a fit and pointing out league-standard practices that skirt and sometimes cross the rule book definitions as a way to besmirch them.
Same thing with "deflategate" where the "evidence" is circumstantial and scientifically dubious at best. Or Spygate where they did it openly at a time when other teams were, shockingly, also doing it openly.
It's always the division rival currently looking up from second place starting the shit too. Where was the outrage when the Yankees had a high resolution camera set up in dead-center with a direct feed to Yankees personnel during the game (basically a fixture at the old stadium)? I'm sure that was never used for anything nefarious. Or the Orioles using a light flash system from CF to steal signs in a way that a hitter could actually get the information with (done quite recently)?
And equating legitimate defense of David Ortiz to A-Rod is absurd. It's entirely possible Ortiz used steroids at some point in his career, but the evidence is fleeting and circumstantial. Alex Rodriguez made it pretty clear he was an active and avid user much of his playing career.