Pigs Kill Celebrating Sox Fan, Apologize

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Jan 9, 2004
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Boston police accept 'full responsibility' in death of Red Sox fan
Woman killed by projectile fired to disperse crowds



(CNN) -- The Boston Police Department "accepts full responsibility" for the death of a 21-year-old college student killed by a police projectile fired to disperse crowds celebrating the Boston Red Sox victory over the New York Yankees.

Preliminary findings indicate that Victoria Snelgrove, a journalism student at Emerson College, was hit in the eye by a projectile that disperses pepper spray on impact, Boston Police Commissioner Kathleen O'Toole said Thursday.

Snelgrove died at 12:50 p.m. at Brigham and Women's Hospital, hours after the overnight melee.

"The Boston Police Department is devastated by this tragedy. This terrible event should never have happened," O'Toole told reporters. "The Boston Police Department accepts full responsibility for the death of Victoria Snelgrove."

Outside the family home in East Bridgewater, Rick Snelgrove clutched a photograph of his daughter and said, "Awful things happen to good people, and my daughter was an exceptional person."

"What happened to her should not happen to any American citizen," he told reporters, fighting back tears. "She loved the Red Sox. She went in to celebrate with friends, she was a bystander. She was out of the way, but she still got shot."

Police have said some 60,000 to 80,000 people took to the streets in the area around Fenway Park late Wednesday. Although most were simply celebrating the 10-3 victory that thrust the Red Sox into the World Series for the first time since 1986, some in the crowd vandalized property, set fires and tried to overturn cars. At least eight people were arrested.

However, video from the scene where Snelgrove was struck showed the crowd in a joyous mood, slapping high fives and chanting celebratory Red Sox slogans. There were no signs of near-riotous conditions in that immediate vicinity although the area was crowded, and dozens of people near her stopped celebrating when they realized the severity of her injury and they tried to get help.
Snelgrove was sprawled out on the ground, with blood running down her face.

"This day, which should have been one of celebration, is heartbreakingly tragic," O'Toole said. "I can't imagine the grief that her family is suffering and express my deepest sympathy to them."

She said the officers involved were "devastated" and have been placed on leave pursuant to department policy. Their names will not be not disclosed until they are interviewed by investigators, she said.

O'Toole said she "firmly and emphatically" accepted responsibility for any errors officers may have made. But she condemned the "punks" she said turned a celebration of the pennant victory into a near-riot.

"The dreadful irony is that the use of less-lethal weapons is designed to reduce the risk of fatal injury," O'Toole said.

Snelgrove was a junior majoring in journalism at Emerson College, a small, four-year communications and performing arts college in Boston, said school spokesman David Rosen. She had transferred to the school last spring and was to turn 22 next week.

Rosen said Snelgrove's family was at her side when she died.








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http://www.cnn.com/2004/US/10/22/fan.death/index.html
 

Grim

Sicc OG
Apr 25, 2002
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#4
on a related note...look at this bullshit


BOSTON -- Mayor Thomas Menino said he was considering banning alcohol sales near Fenway Park during the World Series, following rowdy celebrations of the Red Sox's league championship that turned deadly when a police officer shot a projectile into a crowd.



Menino planned to meet with bar and nightclub owners Friday and also said he would press colleges to expel students found guilty of criminal conduct in the melee.



"Since people won't accept responsibility, I, as mayor, will take it into my own hands," Menino said.



Emerson College student Victoria Snelgrove, 21, died Thursday, hours after being hit in the eye with what was designed to be a non-lethal projectile. Her father expressed outrage at the city's response to her death.



Witnesses said Snelgrove was standing outside the ballpark when a reveler threw a bottle at a mounted police officer. Another officer fired the plastic, pepper-spray filled balls into the crowd, hitting Snelgrove.



Fifteen other people, including a police officer, suffered minor injuries in Boston's Kenmore Square neighborhood near Fenway Park after thousands of baseball fans spilled onto the streets to celebrate the Red Sox triumph Wednesday night at New York's Yankee Stadium. Small fires were set and fights broke out. Boston police reported eight arrests, mostly for disorderly conduct.



Menino said that to avoid a repeat of the rowdiness in his city, he was considering imposing the alcohol-sales ban through a state law never before used in Boston. The law lets him ban sale or distribution of alcohol "in cases of riot or great public excitement."



He said he may also ask bar and restaurant operators not to let television stations broadcast live scenes from inside their establishments during games.



Peter Martineau, manager of Boston Beer Works, across from Fenway Park, expressed sympathy for Snelgrove's family but blamed area college students for causing the problems.


"They all want to come out to the Fenway for the excitement," he said. "I don't think the remedy is banning bars and restaurants from serving liquor. If you can't serve beer or anything, why would people come out? It's a beer works."
 
Jan 9, 2004
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Ban alcohol? Were the pigs drinking when they shot the pepperspray into the celebrating crowd of fans . . . I think not. The mayor sounds like a dumbass.
 
Jan 9, 2004
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Former U.S. attorney to investigate baseball fan's death


Paper says officers untrained
By Denise Lavoie
ASSOCIATED PRESS
7:22 a.m. October 27, 2004

BOSTON – An independent panel headed by a former U.S. attorney will investigate the death of a woman who was shot by police using pellet guns to subdue a crowd of rowdy baseball fans.

Police Commissioner Kathleen M. O'Toole announced the investigation Tuesday as allegations arose that that some of the officers who fired the guns were not trained in their use.

Victoria Snelgrove, a junior at Emerson College, was killed last week when she was hit in the eye by a pepper gas pellet during a raucous street celebration that began after the Red Sox won the American League pennant.

The plastic balls, fired from guns similar to paintball guns, are meant to help police control large groups without causing injury.

The Boston Globe reported Wednesday that two of the officers who fired pepper balls into the crowd were not trained to use the weapons.

The manufacturer of the guns, FN Herstal, did train 29 Boston officers to use the weapons, said Bucky Mills, the company's deputy director of law enforcement sales, marketing, and training. Mills said officers are repeatedly told never to target a person's neck or head.

The Globe quoted two anonymous sources, including an officer involved with police weapons training and an individual briefed on the investigation, as saying Deputy Superintendent Robert O'Toole, who is not related to the commissioner, fired at a group of students who were climbing the girders behind Fenway Park's left field wall.

Robert O'Toole, who was not trained to use the guns, then handed his weapon to patrolman Richard Stanton, who refused to fire it because he also had not been trained, the sources said.

O'Toole handed another gun to patrolman Samil Silta, who also told O'Toole he was not trained to use it but fired into the crowd anyway, the Globe reported. Another officer who fired into the crowd, patrolman Rochefort Milien, was trained to use the guns, the sources said.

Robert O'Toole has not responded to repeated calls by The Associated Press seeking comment. His lawyer, Timothy M. Burke, gave the Globe a statement saying O'Toole was "personally devastated that the actions of the Boston police played any role in causing this tragedy and bringing such pain to her family."

No telephone number is listed for Silta, and the department and the police officers union would not supply a number.

The commissioner said the independent commission will be headed by former U.S. Attorney Donald K. Stern, who prosecuted mob figures and pursued a tax-evasion case against former state House Speaker Charles Flaherty.

Kathleen O'Toole was appointed commissioner in February, just days after riots following the New England Patriots' Super Bowl victory in which one man was killed. She ordered an investigation that found police leaders did not put enough officers on the street that night. She reassigned some police brass and apologized to the city.









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http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/nation/20041027-0722-fandeath.html