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NBA: That's A Crime

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NBA: THAT'S A CRIME!
NY Post
By DAREH GREGORIAN
June 13, 2004 --

The NBA is rapidly turning into a national criminals' association: A whopping 40 percent of NBA players have police records, a bombshell new book charges.

The book by investigative reporter Jeff Benedict, "Out of Bounds: Inside the NBA's Culture of Rape, Violence & Crime" isn't supposed to hit bookstores until later this week, but The Post located a copy that went on sale earlier.

In it, Benedict finds that 40 percent of the American players in the NBA during the 2001-02 season had police records involving a serious crime.

"It's a situation that is out of control and absolutely demands close scrutiny," Benedict writes.

The book is almost a "Who's Who in the NBA," and recounts legal scrapes involving everyone from Shaquille O'Neal, Patrick Ewing, Penny Hardway, Allen Iverson and Bonzi Wells to Ruben Patterson, Glenn Robinson and Damon Stoudamire.

The book notes that the problems with the law aren't a distant memory for many players.

Just as All-Star Kobe Bryant was being charged with sexually assaulting a Colorado woman, "25 law enforcement agencies in 13 cities in the United States and Canada were simultaneously proceeding with arrest warrants, indictments, plea-agreement proceedings or trials involving more than a dozen other NBA players," the book says.

Most of the player crimes involve violence against women, Benedict found.

His nationwide search, which focused on American players, turned up "33 criminal complaints of domestic violence against NBA players who played during the 2001-2002 season," a figure he said "is probably the tip of the iceberg" because "nationally, domestic violence compares with child abuse and rape as the most underreported crime in our society."

Sixteen of those 33 cases ended in conviction.

Many of the sexual abuse cases simply evaporate.

Benedict recounts one case in which former Knick Anthony Mason was questioned about an alleged rape in New Jersey in 2001.

The rape complaint was the third lodged against the Miami Heat player in three years.

The first two allegations were later dropped.

In the New Jersey incident, a woman claimed Mason forced himself on her after inviting her to his hotel, then had two of his buddies join in.

"Why the [heck] would I ask you to come out here if I just wanted to talk to you?" she quoted Mason as saying in the police report.

Prosecutors believed the woman's claims and were set to move forward with the case when the woman suddenly moved to another state and stopped cooperating with them, the book says.

Benedict writes that another alleged victim of a crime who vanished was Kim Grant, who accused O'Neal of grabbing her by the neck during a brief run-in in Orlando.

The case eventually was dropped after O'Neal hired a high-powered attorney who managed to stall the probe, the book says.

Frustrated, Grant then contemplated a lawsuit, but "virtually disappeared," the book says.

It's unclear if there was some kind of financial deal or if Grant just gave up the fight.

The book says that though most player incidents involve crimes against women, documents show "police officers are their second most common group of victims."

The book cited a 1990 incident inolving then-rookie Cliff Robinson of the Portland Trail Blazers.

When police responded to a call to a fight at a Portland restaurant, an enraged Robinson was chasing a man he'd gotten into a fracas with.

The man ran up to a female police officer, Elaine Sloan, for help.

Undeterred, Robinson struck the cop "in the side of the head with such force that Sloan dropped to the ground and was later treated at a nearby hospital for injuries."

When more police arrived and arrested Robinson, Sloan read Robinson his rights. "He mimicked her the entire time," the book says.

When Robinson was issued four citations for assault and disorderly conduct at the police station, he told Sloan, "If I had known you were giving me all these tickets . . . I would have made the hit worthwhile."

Robinson later pleaded guilty to assault and was ordered to undergo anger-management counseling, the book says.

The book points at the youth, wealth and life of privilege of many of the players as the reason for their authority issues.

"For many players, encounters with law-enforcement officials represent the rare instance of someone telling them no," Benedict writes.

"Judging by the way players react when confronted by a police officer, it is no wonder why women who tell them no end up being abused."

The HarperCollins book isn't Benedict's first major expose.

"Pros and Cons: The Criminals Who Play in the NFL" shocked with the revelation that 21 percent of NFL players had been arrested for serious crimes.
 
The players' salaries are a crime. When you throw millions of dollars into emerging NBA stars' faces, they are going to abandon any sense of modesty they might have once had before. The majority are too young to know how to act responsibly with all that money, and in the process they think they are untouchable. If a star fucks up and gets into a scrape with the law, they should have a year's salary taken away from them, no questions asked.
 
that's exactly what happens when you give ignorant, uncivilized thugs millions of dollars and fame. 90% of them didn't have any civility to begin with, and then you throw them tons of money? forget it. If it wasn't for sports a majority of them would be stuck in the ghetto, working a low wage job or in jail.

Professional sports leagues should instate some type of program where you actually have to learn how to act in the real world.


There are many exceptions, but sadly at least 50-60% of pro basketball players fall into this category....and there are just as many in football as well as baseball.
 
Look at the environment these people grow up in. Most grow up in the ghettos, are hoodlums, and are uneducated. Give them fame and fortune then they think they're invisible to the law. The saddest part is that many people actually look up to these fools, especially kids.
 
haters, hater, all of you.

theyre ballin rich and making your yearly salary in 30 minutes.

who cares if they mow down a cop or two, THEY ARE BIGGER THAN YOU, ME AND THE POLICE, THEY DO WHAT THEY WANT. they are LARGER. and not fat. believe it or not, shaq could simmply be holding a newspaper, turn around quickly and knock somebody to their near death. police times 500 would be out yelling murder murder!!

militarized police are the problem, for profiling these black atheletes and trying to follow their 500,000$ ferrari's in their pathetic crown vic's.

pro bball players can fuck whatever models they choose at very close to the snap of a finger. they arent out raping and pillaging, this is the VERY EXCEPTIon. and 40% (of POLICE RECORDS) notice how he wont say criminal records. so you were arrested = police record. doesnt mean shit.



NBA for LIFE
 
FORTUNE said:
haters, hater, all of you.

theyre ballin rich and making your yearly salary in 30 minutes.

who cares if they mow down a cop or two, THEY ARE BIGGER THAN YOU, ME AND THE POLICE, THEY DO WHAT THEY WANT. they are LARGER. and not fat. believe it or not, shaq could simmply be holding a newspaper, turn around quickly and knock somebody to their near death. police times 500 would be out yelling murder murder!!

militarized police are the problem, for profiling these black atheletes and trying to follow their 500,000$ ferrari's in their pathetic crown vic's.

pro bball players can fuck whatever models they choose at very close to the snap of a finger. they arent out raping and pillaging, this is the VERY EXCEPTIon. and 40% (of POLICE RECORDS) notice how he wont say criminal records. so you were arrested = police record. doesnt mean shit.



NBA for LIFE


we love you Ruben Patterson
 
The original book on this was called "Pros and Cons". It came out 10 years ago, it was great.

Some perspective is needed:

The salaries are not 'out of control' - the teams are huge money makers, and the players are the reason. They deserve it. When people stop watching, or stop going, the salaries will drop. Just like if you stop buying Dell computers, Michael Dell's net worth will drop.

Many of the sexual harrassment situations are nonsense. Women with an axe to grind or a grudge. Not all, many.

What percentage of those "legal scrapes" include drugs? Does it equate Damon Stoudamire's love for pot and associated legal problems with real thugs like vernon maxwell? Clearly the two are not the same.

NBA players wear a big ass target. So do all celebrities, especially young, black ones.

The US has more people in jail than any other country in absolute terms . More Americans behind bars than Chinese in China. Not by percenatge...TOTAL! We are a culture that loves arresting people and bringing them down.


That doesn't mean NBA guys are blameless. Lots of them are stupid people who despite earning multi-million dollar salaries, will die broke, get themselves into real trouble, and never do anything off the court.

But let's keep it in perspective. This is a sensationalist book, not hardcore journalism.
 
FORTUNE said:
haters, hater, all of you.

theyre ballin rich and making your yearly salary in 30 minutes.
I agree with Fortune. It's a market-driven dynamic, folks are obviously willing to pay to see these guys play hoops. I love NBA basketball on TV, but personally don't go to games (living in DC doesn't help, who would pay to see the Wizards?)

Hell, the owners and networks are getting rich, why not the players? For all the thugs, there are also some good citizens who emerge as well. Isaiah Thomas, Joe Dumars, Larry Bird, Magic and many many others are now front-office type millionaire decision-makers who came from humble beginnings.

The NBA is FANTASTIC!
 
MattTheSkywalker said:
We are a culture that loves arresting people and bringing them down.


Just how many substantial dysfunctions does the US lead the world in?

Seems like almost all of them?


I have come close to being arrested a couple times. I almost got my ass thrown in jail for telling a female parking officer that I had stopped for 5 seconds to slide a flyer under a door. A male cop happened by and obviously wanted to beat the crap out of me for talking. Luckily she spoke up for me.


Oh well....I will never deny that this WAS a pretty good country. :)
 
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