Tag: dodger stadium
Lawyer For Man Beaten At Dodger Stadium Says Team Failed To Provide Enough Security

Lawyer For Man Beaten At Dodger Stadium Says Team Failed To Provide Enough Security

By Corina Knoll, Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Bryan Stow would not be confined to a wheelchair, would not need 24-hour care, would not bear scars on his head had the Los Angeles Dodgers put more money into security at Dodger Stadium, his attorney said.

In his opening statement Thursday in the trail of a lawsuit filed on behalf of Stow and his two children, Thomas Girardi accused the team of whittling down the quality of its security staff, thereby creating an environment where Stow, a San Francisco Giants fan, could be attacked on opening day when the crowd numbered 56,000.

“There is a great deal of hostility in games like this,” Girardi said. “There is a difference in going to the Hollywood Bowl and watching a night of the symphony versus going to one of these games.”

The lawsuit accuses the Dodgers and former owner Frank McCourt of failing to provide proper security and lighting on the night Stow was beaten unconscious. Stow suffered severe brain injuries that required part of his skull to be removed.

The paramedic had driven with friends from Santa Cruz for the March 2011 game. Wearing Giants gear, the group was taunted during the game.

Girardi said no usher was present in their section that night and that just 19 uniformed Los Angeles police officers were inside the stadium.

After the game, Stow was severely beaten in a Dodger Stadium parking lot. The two security guards that should have been in Parking Lot 2 were absent, Girardi said. The Dodgers had an obligation to make sure the area was reasonably safe, he said.

“But it costs money,” he said.

An attorney for the Dodgers said the team had actually increased its spending for security on opening day in 2011 to $66,604, nearly $15,000 more than the previous year.

In fact, Dana Fox said, the largest security force ever for opening day at Dodger Stadium was on hand. The blame, he said, should be placed on Marvin Norwood and Louie Sanchez, the Rialto residents who pleaded guilty to the attack earlier this year.

“They caused the injuries, it doesn’t matter that they’ve already gone through the criminal justice system,” Fox said. “They still need to be held accountable in a civil court.”

A cross-complaint was filed by the defendants against Norwood and Sanchez. Fox also noted that Stow had been observed delivering his own taunts and that a toxicology report revealed his blood alcohol level was as high as 0.2 percent at the time of the altercation.

He called it a “testosterone- and alcohol-fueled flash fire fight” involving “men in a parking lot who exchanged words and then didn’t let it go.”

Fox also noted the Dodgers’ fan code of conduct, which is displayed in a video played at the game. It directs fans to contact an usher if someone is disturbing them and also provides a hotline number, as well as a phone number to text a complaint.

Calling Stow’s injuries tragic, the attorney reminded the jury that they would witness emotion on the stand.

“But you all committed to setting aside sympathy when it comes to this case,” he said.

Photo via Wikimedia

Beating Suspects Plead Guilty In Dodger Stadium Assault

Beating Suspects Plead Guilty In Dodger Stadium Assault

By Richard Winton, Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Two men charged with severely beating San Francisco Giants fan Bryan Stow in the parking lot of Dodger Stadium in 2011, leaving him with brain damage, pleaded guilty Thursday to assault charges.

Marvin Norwood, 30, and Louie Sanchez, 31, faced charges of mayhem, assault and battery, and inflicting great bodily injury in the beating of Stow, a 44-year-old father of two.

The March 31 attack left Stow, a Northern California paramedic, with serious head trauma and a permanent disability that means he will need care for the rest of his life.

Norwood was sentenced to four years in prison after he pleaded guilty to assault causing great bodily injury in Los Angeles Superior Court. In exchange, the earlier mayhem charge was dropped.

Sanchez pleaded guilty to one count of mayhem in exchange for eight years in prison. He could have received 11 years in prison if convicted of the original charges.

Stow was attacked as he and three other Giants fans, all Bay Area paramedics, walked through the parking lot after the Dodgers’ opening day win against the Giants. Witnesses at a preliminary hearing last year described boorish, drunken and profane behavior by Sanchez against Giants fans.

According to witnesses, Stow said he hoped two men launching a verbal assault would “code,” paramedic slang for having a heart attack, and that one of the men, later identified as Sanchez, shoved Stow. The paramedics took off to avoid a confrontation but a few minutes later the two assailants accosted Stow and his friends.

Witnesses said Stow was sucker-punched, falling to the ground and fracturing his skull. Once on the ground, Stow was kicked in the ribs and head, they said.

None of the witnesses could positively identify Sanchez or Norwood as having delivered the punch, and many of those closest to the altercation were unable to pick either defendant out during police lineups.

But ultimately, the words the two men spoke in jail after their arrest in July 2011 — unaware they were being recorded — made it hard for them to deny their role in the brutal beating, officials said. Those statements, along with testimony from Dorene Sanchez, Sanchez’s sister and Norwood’s fiancee, placed them at the scene of the crime.

In a 12-minute recorded conversation, the two expressed amazement at the evidence detectives had amassed against them, with one remarking that police “know everything, bro” and the other saying, “Wow, we’re done.”

“How much time do you think we are going to get?” Norwood asked.

“A lot,” replied Sanchez.

Placed together in a holding cell as they awaited a police lineup, the men immediately began comparing notes about the evidence and discussed what Sanchez’s 10-year-old son would say.

“I socked him, jumped him and started beating him,” Sanchez said, apologizing to Norwood for getting him involved in the violence.

“That happens, bro,” Norwood replied. “I mean, what kind of man would I have been if I hadn’t jumped in?”

In another recording, Norwood told his mother that he had been arrested for “that Dodger Stadium thing” and admitted he “was involved.” In finding there was enough evidence for the two to stand trial last year, a judge noted that Norwood had tried initially to act as a peacemaker when Sanchez taunted and attacked rival fans, but that he had later joined in the violence.

But Dorene Sanchez of Rialto testified at a preliminary hearing in 2012, after being granted immunity, that she never witnessed the beating, although her statements placed the two at the scene.

She said Norwood and her brother had run after the Giants fans and returned shaken and, in Norwood’s case, with blood on his hands. Norwood is the father of her 2-year-old child.

Dorene Sanchez was originally booked with the men as an accessory after the fact, for driving them from the ballpark, but she began cooperating with prosecutors, who subsequently opted not to pursue charges against her.

Los Angeles Police Department robbery-homicide detectives first came across Sanchez’s and Norwood’s names while re-examining more than 700 tips from the public when the case was reassigned after another LAPD unit arrested the wrong man.

The incident drew national attention and calls for police, city officials and the Dodgers to tighten stadium security and better protect fans.

Photo via Wikimedia

Photo Of The Day — January 25

Photo Of The Day — January 25

The rink at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles during preparations for the Los Angeles Kings and Anaheim Ducks’ game outdoors on Saturday, Jan. 25, 2014. (Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times/MCT)