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B4
Picture of Cholly
Posted
Concerned that some of its players are flashing signals related to street gangs, the National Football League has hired experts to examine game tapes and identify the hand gestures, a newspaper reported Wednesday.

"There have been some suspected things we've seen," NFL vice president of security Milt Ahlerich told the Los Angeles Times. "When we see it, we quietly jump on it immediately, directly with the team and the player or employee involved to cease and desist. Period."

Ahlerich says the NFL has long warned its players about the influence of gangs. Concern intensified after Denver Broncos cornerback Darrent Williams was gunned down following an altercation involving known gang members in 2007.

The concern was raised with first-year players at the recent rookie symposium, and a video on the dangers of gangs was shown to every player in the league last year.

"Guys come from all over the country, and who knows what they're really doing?" Jacksonville Jaguars receiver Dennis Northcutt told the paper. "People have got signs for their kids, signs for their fraternities. How do you differentiate who's really throwing up gang signs?"

Northcutt gave an example.

"This is a gang sign," he said, touching his index finger to his thumb to form a squished OK sign. "But at the same time, it's a sign for a personnel group."

Mike Pereira, the NFL's vice president of officiating, said the gang experts being consulted by the league take those factors into account. They are looking for "symbols, clothing, jewelry or other items that would signify an association with criminal gang enterprises," Ahlerich said.

Game officials will not be asked to identify gang signals but will alert league headquarters of anything suspicious they see.

League executives did not specify how offenders will be punished, but Pereira said, "it will be dealt with harshly. The commissioner is not going to stand for gang signals on the field."

Other leagues have varying policies on aspects of the gang issue.

The Pac 10 Conference created a rule in 1992 prohibiting football players from wearing bandannas and allowing them to wear elastic skullcaps only if they were in the school's primary colors or black.

In April, Boston Celtics star Paul Pierce was fined $25,000 by the NBA for making "menacing gestures" as he walked toward the Atlanta Hawks bench.

Major League Baseball has a policy related to merchandising, and forced New Era to pull New York Yankees caps last year because they featured gang colors and logos.

According to the paper, an NHL spokesman said the league has a policy against inappropriate gestures but has never employed a gang expert.



http://msn.foxsports.com/nfl/story/8350038?MSNHPHMA
 
Posts: 838 | Registered: March 17, 2008Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
A2
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fro About time! Others should take a note as well. Gang signs are not innocent hand movements. They are dangerous signals and messages to incite violence or destructive behavior. At one time, I mastered in identifying various gang signs, however, this skill was dismantled [for professionals working with at-risk children] in many areas around the country as a result of budget cuts. I'm glad that the NFL industry is bold enough to bring back an important and necessary tool which protects our community in and out of the fields. fro
 
Posts: 2121 | Registered: July 31, 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
D3
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quote:
Concerned that some of its players are flashing signals related to street gangs, the National Football League has hired experts to examine game tapes and identify the hand gestures, a newspaper reported Wednesday.

"There have been some suspected things we've seen," NFL vice president of security Milt Ahlerich told the Los.........

.......caps last year because they featured gang colors and logos.

According to the paper, an NHL spokesman said the league has a policy against inappropriate gestures but has never employed a gang expert.


Pathetic and disgusting. I guess these guys aren't making enough money. So there appears to be something to the adage of "you can take a Negro out of the hood but you can't take the hood out of a Negro." Oh well......


"There is never time in the future in which we will work out our salvation. The challenge is in the moment; the time is always now."
-James A. Baldwin

 
Posts: 89 | Registered: July 14, 2008Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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