The AP story excerpted below tells more details about Ray Rice’s traffic stop and subsequent tweet. When added in to other facts reported today, it raises a couple of questions.
AP/ESPN:
Baltimore County police say Rice was stopped Monday about 6:45 p.m. at the Garrison Forest shopping center.
Spokesman Lt. Rob McCullough says Rice was given a warning to put a lighter tint on his car’s windows. He said there was no paperwork or police report generated from the incident.
Police are conducting a preliminary investigation concerning the officer getting Rice’s autograph. The officer has not been disciplined.
“It was a simple traffic stop,” McCullough says.
Earlier reports indicated Rice was buying a video game. According to Google Maps, there is a Game Stop and a Best Buy in the vicinity of Garrison Forest Plaza.
Jamison Hensley reported:
Rice was stopped in a parking lot on his way to buying the new “Call of Duty” video game.
Call of Duty: Black of Ops was scheduled for release today, November 9, 2010. Stores weren’t putting the game on sale until 12:01 a.m. and they usually get penalized pretty heavily if they sell them any earlier.
Ray Rice told the media today that he was on his way to buy the game at 6:45 p.m. on November 8. This means one of two things: Rice was lying about what he was doing or he was getting the game early through a connection in the store.
Granted, the most likely situation is that Rice had a connection at the store hooking him up with the game early, but there is some room for doubt in the equation now because of his detailed answer about which game he was going to buy.
Rice denied any special treatment from police in his statement today. Yet, if you assume he was telling the truth, that means he was getting special treatment from the store selling the game. Which is it?
This isn’t a matter of grave concern, but it is interesting that Rice’s attempt to prove he wasn’t getting special treatment from police shows he probably was getting it from Game Stop or Best Buy. Granted, if he is still going to the store to buy it, that’s not a huge deal. Hollywood celebrities, and probably some pro athletes, get copies of games weeks in advance at times. I’ve seen that firsthand.
(Continue reading…)
BY:
Jeff Quinton @
2010-11-09 ,
9:51 pm
Category: Sports |
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