Wow!!!!!!!!!!!! , David Stern vowing to build the most effective possible system to monitor any illegal activity going on in league, and preserve the game's integrity.
What is the NBA’s first rank of rules and procedures?
1. Began posting officiating assignments the morning of games
2. Mandatory gambling education for players
3. No more Specific misconduct and favoritism toward certain players and teams
We for one agreed to the restructure of the NBA’s referees operations department and only began posting officiating assignments in the morning of games, because criminal activity will always exist every place else in the world and that something no one can guarantee. But I think the NBA is going to have the most effective possible system that's ever been devised don’t think so?
One more question, do you think no one else done the no no stuff that Donaghy committed?
We had read some comment that most Lakers fans have no class and are sore losers.
We have class and I can Promise you we are not sore losers either. Win or Loss, we are a Lakers, Dodgers, Sparks, and Rams fans...
Our family's supports and loyalty to all these teams continues even if they are continues to perform poorly year after year.
Last year, The Lakers give their fans an entertainment value that we derives from spectating and motivates us to remain a loyal fan. Entertainment value of team of any sports are also valuable to communities in general.
How are you supportive of your favorite team what sports that maybe all year long?
Do you think Dodgers pitcher Hiroki Kuroda, can help the Los Angeles Dodgers win division series and be a champ again?
Wow!!!!!!!!!!!! can you Imagine being in his shoes? Life must be hard for him thinking he cannot even attend his own children graduations?
Simpson, went from American sports idol to celebrity-in-exile after his murder acquittal, could spend the rest of his life in prison.
The Hall of Fame football star was convicted of kidnapping, armed robbery and 10 other charges for gathering up five men a year ago and storming into a room at a hotel-casino, where the group seized several game balls, plaques and photos. Prosecutors said two of the men with him were armed; one of them said Simpson asked him to bring a gun.
The 61-year-old former football star was convicted of all 12 counts late Friday after jurors deliberated for more than 13 hours. He released a heavy sigh as the charges were read and was immediately taken into custody.
Many people considered the four-week trial justice delayed. Simpson was cleared in 1995 of murdering his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, Ronald Goldman, in one of the most sensational trials of the 20th century, but was later found liable for the deaths in a civil case.
Do you think the verdict a payback in this case?
Do you think the Jurors judge OJ fairly and Honestly?
O.J. Simpson and his attorney, Yale Galanter arrive at court before Simpson was found guilty on all 12 charges, including felony kidnapping, armed robbery and conspiracy at the Clark County Regional Justice Center in Las Vegas on Friday, Oct. 3, 2008. The verdict comes thirteen years to the day after he was acquitted of double murder charges. (AP Photo/Daniel Gluskoter, Pool)
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I wonder if FoxSports.com get this kind of question too.
yes, our e-mail is verified
Sorry you guys I cannot make comment especially to people that we appreciates and learn some from thier writing.
Phil Jackson Pre-Training Camp Press Conference
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A convicted murderer who threatened to kill his victim's wife if he was ever released from prison was paroled Tuesday.
James A. Bush, now 53, was sentenced to die in 1975 after his conviction in the stabbing death a year earlier of Kirby Marshburn of Jacksonville. When the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the death penalty in 1976, Bush's sentence was commuted to life in prison.
After 33 years in custody, Bush walked away from Davidson Correctional Center a free man Tuesday morning.
"It is still unbelievable to me that in this state, one can go from death row to possible release from prison," Senior Assistant Onslow County District Attorney Ernie Lee wrote in one of his numerous letters opposing Bush's parole every year since Bush was first eligible in 2000.
Bush's release is the result of his participation in the Mutual Agreement Parole Program, said Mary Harrop, a spokeswoman for the Post Release and Parole Commission.
MAPP is designed to prepare selected inmates who were sentenced prior to 1994 for release through structured activities, vocational courses and participation in community-based programs, according to the N.C. Department of Correction.
"Although I was not the prosecuting attorney in the Bush case, this case rates as among the most horrendous, senseless murders I have dealt with in this county," Lee wrote in letters to the parole commission opposing Bush's early release. "Under no circumstances should this brutal, cold-blooded murderer be released back into society."
Bush, a Marine at the time, stole a car aboard Camp Lejeune and crashed it in a ditch near Marshburn's Jacksonville home. Bush walked to Marshburn's home and asked to use the telephone even though he walked passed a payphone and had change in his pocket, according to court documents.
In court, Bush said Marshburn told him "a #### boy down the street has a wrecker."
Bush, who is black, told the court the remark made him angry and he stabbed Marshburn, who was white, from behind.
Marshburn was stabbed 14 times, according to autopsy reports.
Marshburn's wife, Eva Marshburn, arrived home from work and walked in on Bush killing her husband. Bush tied her up with phone cord he had cut from the wall and threatened to kill her if she ever testified against him, court records state.
Bush ransacked the house, took Marshburn's wallet from his pocket as the 65-year-old man lay dying. Bush left Eva Marshburn tied up to watch her husband bleed to death, according to court records.
Eva Marshburn died in 2004 at the age of 92. "She lived with the memories of seeing her husband murdered for 30 years," Lee wrote in a 2005 letter opposing Bush's parole.
Attempts by The Daily News to locate Bush or contact the Marshburn family members were unsuccessful.
In 1987, a federal judge ordered a new trial for Bush due to an error in jury instructions. Bush was convicted again of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison.
Lee wrote in a letter to the Parole Commission that Bush "was sentenced to death and deserved to die in the gas chamber of this state. If the decision were left to me and the law so allowed, I would return him to death row."