c_hawkbob wrote:Actually just intimidating someone can be assault. People get assault and battery mixed up ... battery (from battering) is the physical harm part.
While we maintain the utmost respect for the investigative process, after speaking with Marshawn, we are comfortable these accusations are bogus
c_hawkbob wrote:Official statement from the Seahawls:While we maintain the utmost respect for the investigative process, after speaking with Marshawn, we are comfortable these accusations are bogus
http://espn.go.com/nfl/story/_/id/11343 ... ynch-bogus
Pretty strong statement considering the team generally always waits till all the facts are in before issuing a statement.
NorthHawk wrote:I'm hoping it's nothing, but these things tend to flare up again later if not quashed early.
Maybe the police will make a decision in short order.
Seahawks4Ever wrote:Before the Bellevue Police decided to splash Lynch's name to all of the media they should have ascertained whether their person of interest was actually Marshawn Lynch. Lynch, it turns out was exactly where he was supposed to be, at the team hotel and in bed resting his weary bones. I don't think some women was scammed by a Beast-mode look-a-like I believe it was a scam to shake Lynch down. Luckily for him he was under lock down by the team.
Let this be a lesson for professional athletes both men and women that there are predators out there that will smile to your face while stabbing you in the back. In racing these people are called "pit-lizards", other crafts and industries have different if not similar names. Anyway, I am relieved that Marshawn has been cleared of all charges and wasn't even there. He DOES know how to honor a commitment!
RiverDog wrote:Seahawks4Ever wrote:Before the Bellevue Police decided to splash Lynch's name to all of the media they should have ascertained whether their person of interest was actually Marshawn Lynch. Lynch, it turns out was exactly where he was supposed to be, at the team hotel and in bed resting his weary bones. I don't think some women was scammed by a Beast-mode look-a-like I believe it was a scam to shake Lynch down. Luckily for him he was under lock down by the team.
Let this be a lesson for professional athletes both men and women that there are predators out there that will smile to your face while stabbing you in the back. In racing these people are called "pit-lizards", other crafts and industries have different if not similar names. Anyway, I am relieved that Marshawn has been cleared of all charges and wasn't even there. He DOES know how to honor a commitment!
I am quite certain that the BPD did not "splash Lynch's name to all of the media." It's public information.
c_hawkbob wrote:RiverDog wrote:Seahawks4Ever wrote:Before the Bellevue Police decided to splash Lynch's name to all of the media they should have ascertained whether their person of interest was actually Marshawn Lynch. Lynch, it turns out was exactly where he was supposed to be, at the team hotel and in bed resting his weary bones. I don't think some women was scammed by a Beast-mode look-a-like I believe it was a scam to shake Lynch down. Luckily for him he was under lock down by the team.
Let this be a lesson for professional athletes both men and women that there are predators out there that will smile to your face while stabbing you in the back. In racing these people are called "pit-lizards", other crafts and industries have different if not similar names. Anyway, I am relieved that Marshawn has been cleared of all charges and wasn't even there. He DOES know how to honor a commitment!
I am quite certain that the BPD did not "splash Lynch's name to all of the media." It's public information.
Arrests are public information, indictments are, bookings are, convictions are ... but allegations and investigations? No, they're not.
c_hawkbob wrote:RiverDog wrote:Seahawks4Ever wrote:Before the Bellevue Police decided to splash Lynch's name to all of the media they should have ascertained whether their person of interest was actually Marshawn Lynch. Lynch, it turns out was exactly where he was supposed to be, at the team hotel and in bed resting his weary bones. I don't think some women was scammed by a Beast-mode look-a-like I believe it was a scam to shake Lynch down. Luckily for him he was under lock down by the team.
Let this be a lesson for professional athletes both men and women that there are predators out there that will smile to your face while stabbing you in the back. In racing these people are called "pit-lizards", other crafts and industries have different if not similar names. Anyway, I am relieved that Marshawn has been cleared of all charges and wasn't even there. He DOES know how to honor a commitment!
I am quite certain that the BPD did not "splash Lynch's name to all of the media." It's public information.
Arrests are public information, indictments are, bookings are, convictions are ... but allegations and investigations? No, they're not.
c_hawkbob wrote:I sure would be! Once your name is out there in a case like this, whether you did it or not the association is made in many peoples minds. The sound bite doesn't go away nowadays, the bell can't be unrung if you will ... they can can say "oops" all they want, but a measure of harm is still done.
The very least the BPD should have done is check Marshawn's alibi (which in this case would have taken a single phone call) before issuing a press release. And IMO "they were talking about it on twitter" is even more of a reason to have made that call first, not an excuse to jump the gun!
RiverDog wrote:c_hawkbob wrote:I sure would be! Once your name is out there in a case like this, whether you did it or not the association is made in many peoples minds. The sound bite doesn't go away nowadays, the bell can't be unrung if you will ... they can can say "oops" all they want, but a measure of harm is still done.
The very least the BPD should have done is check Marshawn's alibi (which in this case would have taken a single phone call) before issuing a press release. And IMO "they were talking about it on twitter" is even more of a reason to have made that call first, not an excuse to jump the gun!
Which is why they felt that they had to issue a public statement quickly rather than wait a few days and have it really get out of hand. I also think it would have taken more than a single phone call to confirm Beast's alibi. Unless there are extenuating circumstances, are not most police interviews done face-to-face? How do they know the identity of who they are talking to if all they have is a telephone connection? We also don't know what the BPD's work load was. Being that it was a pretty lame charge, property damage, they may have had bigger fish to fry. I don't think a couple of days is an exceeding long period of time to complete an investigation like this.
If you're looking for a villain, look for the person who filed these charges. She's the one that ought to be the target of our angst.
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