Saturday, May 28, 2011

Los Angeles Dodgers trying to dodge the Brian Stow suit

The family of Brian Stow is suing the L.A. Dodgers. Stow is the male who was beaten by Dodgers followers after a game. Dodgers’ followers attacked Stow, a Giants fan, in the parking lot after the opening day game between the Giants and Dodgers and almost perished from the injuries. The subsequent investigation has resulted in only a single arrest.

Brian Stow beating case led to arrest

The LA Times reports that a criminal arrest was made by the LA Police Department recently. The arrest was made as part of the Brian Stow beating case. Giovanni Ramirez, 31, was arrested by the LAPD on suspicion of being one of the two assailants that beat Brian Stow, who has remained in critical condition since he was attacked March 31. Stow was seen being taunted by two men because he wore a Giants shirt until one took a swing at him. He was kicked repeatedly after falling to the ground. Even after he became unconscious, the men still beat him. Ramirez, a known gang member, has three prior felony convictions and is being charged with assault with a deadly weapon, as he kicked the victim nearly to death.

Suing the Dodgers

ESPN states that since the Dodgers did not have enough security, the Stow family is suing them. The Stow family lawyer states the Dodgers are responsible for making sure the stadium is safe and has enough security. It clearly was not so. The Dodgers took care of security right after the incident. They employed more security personnel including previous LAPD officials. Other Dodgers enthusiasts have been drunk and unruly in the past. Some say these “problem fans” are gang members that like to watch the game. There were sketches made of the two men that beat Stow. Ramirez was identified as one of the men by his parole officer. It is unclear who the other man is. He could be everyone. CNN states that Stow has movement in his arms and legs and has been able to open his eyes.

Sports enthusiasts are violent sometimes

Sports fans and violence have gone hand in hand for some time. In 531 A.D., the Nika riots occurred in Constantinople due to chariot racing for a week, reports Wikipedia. Before the army killed the rioters, there were 10,000 deaths and half the city was burned down. Soccer has caused violence in Europe for a long time. When the Greek professional soccer championship was over in Greece at the end of April, enthusiasts rioted, states Fox News. Polish soccer supporters rioted on May 3 after the end of the Polish Cup Final match, according to the Daily Mail, and had to be subdued by riot police after invading the field, setting the stadium on fire and assaulting players.

Articles cited

Los Angeles Times

latimes.com/news/local/la-me-dodgers-20110523,0,2773021.story

ESPN

sports.espn.go.com/los-angeles/mlb/news/story?id=6584013&campaign=rss&source=MLBHeadlines

CNN

articles.cnn.com/2011-05-19/justice/california.fan.beaten_1_billboard-campaign-brutal-attack-parking-lot?_s=PM:CRIME

Nika Riots

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nika_riots

Fox News

foxnews.com/sports/2011/05/02/aek-fan-club-torched-2-days-cup-final-riots/

Daily Mail

dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1383480/Concerns-hooliganism-Poland-football-cup-final-ends-mass-riot.html



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