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Steven Gerrard cleared of affray

Liverpool star says he hit man three times in self-defence in argument over music in Southport bar

The Liverpool captain and England midfielder Steven Gerrard was cleared of affray today after a row over controlling the music playing in a bar.

Liverpool crown court heard that Marcus McGee, 34, was punched in the face by the footballer in a brawl at a bar in Southport last December.

Gerrard admitted hitting McGee three times but denied affray, saying he had been acting in self-defence as he thought the other man was about to strike him.

Gerrard left Liverpool crown court today to applause from fans and shouts of “come on Rocky”.

Speaking to reporters, he said: “Can I just say how pleased I am with today’s verdict. I’d like to put this case behind me. I’m really looking forward to the season ahead and concentrating on football.

Judge Henry Globe told the footballer: “The verdict is a credible verdict on the full facts of this case, and you walk away from this court with your reputation intact.”

The case centred on whether the jury believed Gerrard had been acting in self-defence.

Earlier in the evening of the incident last December, Gerrard and a group of seven friends had been in high spirits, dancing and drinking in the Lounge Inn and singing along to music after Liverpool’s 5-1 victory over Newcastle, a match in which Gerrard had scored two goals.

The footballer had been drinking Budweiser and a sweet liqueur-based shot called a Jammy Donut. In police interviews, he estimated his level of drunkenness as seven out of 10; one being “sober as a judge” and 10 being “legless”.

However, at around 2am, the mood soured when Gerrard walked up to the bar and asked McGee, a customer who had been asked to take charge of the music, for a card to control the CD player. McGee refused.

Six minutes later, Gerrard approached McGee, who was still at the bar. Gerrard’s friend John Doran landed the first blow, jabbing his elbow into McGee’s face. As McGee reeled backwards, Gerrard thought he was about to be attacked and reacted with punches.

Ian Smith, another member of Gerrard’s party, joined in. Doran and Smith then kicked McGee.

Gerrard was dragged away from the fight by the bar manager and was restrained. Six co-defendants, including two Accrington Stanley players, admitted charges of affray or threatening behaviour before their trial was due to begin. They will be sentenced at a later date.

The jurors watched CCTV footage from the bar in which Gerrard could be seen enjoying himself with his friends as a woman danced eccentrically nearby, causing laughter in court.

During the trial, the prosecutor, David Turner QC, paid homage to Gerrard’s skill, describing him as a world-class footballer and “a star”. He added: “Wherever you go in Liverpool, and indeed the world, there are little boys proudly wearing that red Liverpool shirt with No 8 and the name Gerrard on the back of it.”

When interviewed by the police later that night, Gerrard agreed there had been an exchange of words concerning the music but said McGee had been aggressive. He said he had no intention of having a fight.

Gerrard told the court yesterday that he struck McGee “to defend myself”. He said: “I thought he was going to hit me.

“He was on his way forward to me and his behaviour had changed from when I was having a discussion with him. I didn’t know why.”

Asked how he felt now, the footballer added: “I am certainly mistaken in thinking he was coming towards me to throw punches at me. Now I know, obviously, he had been struck, reacted and thought the strike was by me and he came into me and that’s when I reacted.

“I am sorry about the whole incident.”

Gerrard remained calm and quietly spoken as he gave evidence, repeatedly sipping a glass of water as he stood in the witness box.

He said it had been very difficult to explain to the police what he had done until he saw the CCTV footage.

He told the jury he had been used to people “mithering” him and making derogatory or insulting remarks and he was usually able to smooth things over.

He admitted calling McGee “a prick” to one of his friends when he refused to change the music.

He claimed McGee swore at him during their conversation.

Gerrard said a member of staff at the bar had given him permission to choose music from a CD player McGee was operating.

“I couldn’t understand why the guy had such a problem with me, why he was so aggressive,” he said.

Gerrard told the court he had a conviction for drink-driving when he was 19 but had not been in any other trouble with the police.

Gerrard welled up with tears as a statement from Liverpool legend Kenny Dalglish was read out. Dalglish described Gerrard as “not the archetypal footballer. He does not like to move in movie star circles.”

He described him as “quiet” and “very private”. Despite his wealth, Dalglish said, Gerrard had “never forgotten his roots”.

“He is a very respectful man who has always behaved to senior players in a respectful way,” Dalglish said. “He is a very humble man.”

Dalglish, who had earlier met Gerrard on the night of the incident, said he had been with a group of boys who were “normal, polite, eating sushi and enjoying themselves”.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Youth Radio — Youth Media International: Oakland Passes “Respectability Tax” for Pot Clubs (VIDEO)

Originally published on Youthradio.org, the premier source for youth generated news throughout the globe. By: Orlando Campbell You’d think youth in Oakland, California would be…

Young men who stay with parents likely to be violent

Young men who stay with their parents are more violent than those who live on their own, a new study has found.
The research at Queen Mary, University of London indicates that men still living at home in their early twenties have fewer responsibilities and more disposable income to spend on alcohol.
To reach the conclusion, Professor [...]

Will Milan teenage drinking ban work?

Milan has banned the sale of alcohol to young teenagers in an effort to curb binge-drinking. Is this a good idea?

Milan to enforce teen drink ban

By David Willey
BBC News, Rome

Italian teenagers drinking alcohol (file image)

Milan has banned the consumption and sale of alcohol to young teenagers in an effort to curb binge-drinking.

Parents of children under the age of 16 caught drinking wine or spirits will be liable to heavy fines of up to 500 Euros ($700;£450).

A third of 11-year-olds in the city have alcohol related problems, it says.

In a country where for centuries wine has been part of local culture – and prohibition would be unthinkable – the ban has come as a shock.

But the authorities are deeply concerned about the increase in consumption of alcohol by children as young as 11 in the country’s industrial and financial capital.

So as an experiment, supplying alcohol – either wine or spirits – to youths under the age of 16 in bars, restaurants, pizza shops and liquor stores will be banned.

Heavy fines will be imposed on the parents of offending children and on shopkeepers or bar owners who serve them.

A national law banning the sale of alcohol to under-16s is only loosely enforced, as Italian families are used to sometimes giving young children a teaspoon of wine as a family party treat.

In past centuries, Italian children would sometimes even be given wine to drink in preference to water which was often polluted.

There has been a storm of protest by bar owners who refuse to act as alcohol police for young people.

But changing social customs mean that old easy-going attitudes towards consumption of alcohol in Italy will have to change. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Alcohol, drugs found in EXIT victim

A post-mortem on a British man who died last week in Novi Sad during the EXIT music festival showed that he had alcohol and narcotics in his system. The victim, identified as Anthony Jonathan Fisk, had 1.7 permilles of alcohol, as well as traces of synthetic narcotic ecstasy in his blood.

Bearing arms

By James Coomarasamy
BBC News, Nashville, Tennessee

Glock 9mm pistol

Following a recent series of high-profile shooting incidents in the United States, the southern state of Tennessee is changing its gun laws this week.

It is relaxing them.

If a last-minute legal challenge fails, from Tuesday, gun owners in the state will be allowed to carry their weapons in a lot more public places – including bars and restaurants.

I went to Nashville to find out what local residents thought about the proposed law change.

‘Seconds count’

Nikki Goeser takes her Second Amendment right to bear arms very seriously.

One of Tennessee’s 250,000 registered gun owners, she saw her husband, Ben, shot dead in front of her in April.

She believes her right was denied when she needed it most.

Soon, Tennessee’s bars and restaurants will no longer be off-limits for registered weapons.

State legislators – a quarter of whom own firearms – have passed a law allowing guns into bars and restaurants, but preventing their owners from buying alcohol.

For the bill’s Democratic sponsor – State Senator Doug Jackson – it is a case of preserving the rights of individuals and those of individual states.

"People are fearful about tomorrow. They feel insecure. And the Second Amendment right is something that they cherish and it’s a means of protecting themselves and their family and defending what they have. It provides security in troubled times."

But on the streets of Nashville, even some staunch defenders of Second Amendment rights fear that the Music City is about to become Dodge City. And that mixing guns and alcohol is a recipe for disaster.

‘Scared’

Nashville restaurateur Randy Rayburn is anything but cool about the idea of his customers having guns.

He is leading a last-minute legal challenge to the law – to protect his barmen.

"Yes they’re scared, I’m scared, my wife is scared for our personal safety."

He has done what restaurant owners are permitted to do – placed a sign in his window, saying "no guns allowed".

But he is worried that the sign will not be enough to prevent people taking the new law into their own hands.

"I don’t care so much about a bad guy’s life… If they choose that, and I am armed I know what I’m doing, I will try to stop them."

Nikki Goeser

"We don’t need vigilantism inside my business," he says. "I’m a gun owner, I have a gun at my home, but I keep it there, not at a public place where many people’s lives can be threatened.

And he has support from the city’s police chief, Ronal Serpas, who does not believe that people who walk into bars with guns will steer clear of the shot glasses.

"If you think about how alchohol influences the choices people make… I don’t believe people are not going to drink and have guns, because I know they drink and drive," he says.

"What process is going through their mind as it’s clouded by alcohol [They're] trying to do a good thing, but they have NO training, NO experience, NO time for reflective thought, and their minds are consumed by alcohol – it doesn’t make sense."

But for Nikki – and other law-abiding gun owners – what does not make sense is being allowed to have a gun, but being prevented from using it when it counts

"I hear people say all the time, guns are made specifically to kill," she tells me.

"My answer to that is: ‘yes a gun can kill, but in the correct hands, it can be used to save innocent lives’. I don’t care so much about a bad guy’s life. I’m sorry, I don’t. They make the choice to be evil, that’s their choice. If they choose that, and I am armed I know what I’m doing, I will try to stop them."

And soon she will be allowed to – in a lot more places.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Bootleg alcohol poisoning kills 112 in India

• Protesters attack buses and bootleg stores
• Narendra Modi appeals for calm as death toll rises

One of India’s leading politicians faced calls hasfor his resignation after more than 100 people died from drinking bootleg alcohol in the western state of Gujarat.

The victims, mostly from the slums of Ahmedabad, Gujarat’s largest city, began dying at the start of the week. The death toll has risen to 112 in Gujarat’s worst case of moonshine poisoning in a decade. Last year, nearly 170 people died after drinking toxic liquor in southern India.

The affair has escalated into a political crisis for Narendra Modi, a member of the Bharatiya Janata party (BJP) and the state’s chief minister, whose appeals for calm have failed to quell public anger.

Such is the scale of the tragedy, doctors have been rushed from across the state to Ahmedabad to help treat 150 critically ill patients in three hospitals.

“The [intensive care unit] is full of these patients and there are about 60 outside in various wards,” an intern at one hospital told the Times of India newspaper.

“The last time the state witnessed a liquor tragedy of this scale was in 1989, when 132 people were killed in a matter of days,” he added.

As the death toll rises, so has public anger. Amid accusations that police abetted in bootlegging, hundreds of protesters attacked buses with sticks, threw stones at police and burned effigies of Modi, already a deeply divisive figure because of his hardline Hinduism. Members of a women’s rights group raided a bootlegging shop on Thursday, destroyed the alcohol stocks and handed the owner over to police.

“If the police don’t take action we will move in,” said Meena Patel, a member of the group, known as Sakhi Mandal.

The state parliament has also been in uproar, with opposition members ripping microphones from their desks and hurling them at ruling party MPs.

“The police is hand in glove with the bootleggers and that’s how [the illegal business] has proliferated, resulting in this tragedy,” said the state opposition leader, Shakti Singh Goel, of Congress.

The party demanded the resignation of Modi and home minister Amit Shah, whose ministry oversees the state police force.

Modi “has forfeited the right to rule Gujarat in the face of such a massive tragedy”, said Siddharth Patel, another Congress leader.

Modi, who earned notoriety in 2002 when he was accused of failing to halt one of India’s worst outbreaks of communal violence, has appealed for calm.

“I appeal to the citizens of Ahmedabad for calm and promise to take deterrent action against the guilty,” he said.

Under public pressure to crack down on illegal booze, police raided illegal alcohol outlets and rounded up more than 800 alleged bootleggers. They have also arrested the alleged main supplier of the deadly alcohol.

Authorities have asked a retired judge to investigate the deaths and suspended six police officers for negligence. However, activists accuse officers and politicians of taking bribes and turning a blind eye to the bootlegging.

Selling and consuming alcohol is a criminal offence in Gujarat, the birthplace of Mahatma Gandhi and India’s only dry state.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds