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View Full Version : Kobe being investigated for "drugs" also.



Cassius Clay
07-18-2003, 07:04 PM
Just mentioned on ESPN.

LittleGeneral
07-18-2003, 07:05 PM
update?

mrcoon
07-18-2003, 07:06 PM
Well, I can't give that any credence because he probably was on something since he recently had surgery.

Cassius Clay
07-18-2003, 07:09 PM
This would mean illegal drugs, not prescribed medication.

ducks
07-18-2003, 07:14 PM
any links for drugs

Cassius Clay
07-18-2003, 07:16 PM
Nothing more on ESPN as of now.

ducks
07-18-2003, 07:19 PM
ESPN said something about substantial amounts of drugs in the hotel room... and they were concerned about these drugs crossing state lines for some reason.

Cassius Clay
07-18-2003, 07:20 PM
No mention of what those drugs were.

LittleGeneral
07-18-2003, 07:22 PM
That'd be huge...weird that there isn't more being said about this...

Admiral
07-18-2003, 07:24 PM
Yet some prescription drugs are just as harmful as the illegal stuff. Go figure.

LittleGeneral
07-18-2003, 07:24 PM
True, Admiral, but IMO, if true, this would add a TON to the credence of the rape charge, would it not?

adidas11
07-18-2003, 07:28 PM
Kobe is in a world of hurt, if this situation is true.

gospurs21
07-18-2003, 07:53 PM
he just better hope he didn't force the girl to use drugs and there is evidence of that as well.

Go Spurs...

LittleGeneral
07-18-2003, 07:58 PM
gospurs, you'd think if there was any decisive evidence of drug use, a charge of possession, etc. would have been filed by the DA as well.

Cassius Clay
07-18-2003, 08:04 PM
It's still under investigation.

gospurs21
07-18-2003, 08:06 PM
only if they could have gotten the goods on krybe. remember he turned himself in. I doubt he had drugs wrapped in tinfoil. NBA players don't carry around drugs wrapped in tinfoil to police stations. That's for airports

Go Spurs...

LittleGeneral
07-18-2003, 08:08 PM
It's still under investigation.

Then why didn't the DA wait until all the evidence regarding the situation had been sorted out?

gospurs21
07-18-2003, 08:13 PM
as soon as you have enough evidense you file the charges. that does not mean the investigation ends

Go Spurs...

F7
07-18-2003, 08:24 PM
:lol

this is hilarious. Kobe brought all of this upon himself.

Shelly
07-18-2003, 08:30 PM
Did you read the LA Times timeline? Yahoo has a link to it.

Kobe registered at the hotel as Javier Rodriguez :lol

LittleGeneral
07-18-2003, 08:41 PM
link?

Cassius Clay
07-18-2003, 08:42 PM
It's not the County DA that is investigating the drugs charge.

LittleGeneral
07-18-2003, 08:42 PM
Found it: www.latimes.com/sports/la...-headlines (http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-071803kobetime_lat,1,7518226.story?coll=la-home-headlines)



EAGLE, Colo. — These are the key events involving the arrest of Laker star Kobe Bryant on allegations he sexually assaulted a 19-year-old Eagle woman, pieced together by Times reporters who examined hotel records and conducted interviews with sheriff's and crime lab investigators, law enforcement officials, hotel executives and employees, witnesses and other sources. The times, listed in Mountain time, in some cases are approximations.

June 30

• Afternoon — Without informing the Lakers, Bryant takes a private flight to Eagle, where he has made arrangements to undergo an arthroscopic surgical procedure on his right knee at the Steadman Hawkins Clinic in nearby Vail. The team had been expecting to meet with Bryant to discuss the problems he was having with tendinitis in the knee.

• 10 p.m. — Bryant and three male associates check in at the 56-room Lodge & Spa at Cordillera in Edwards, a small town about halfway between Eagle and Vail. Bryant uses the alias, "Javier Rodriguez" and is assigned a first-floor room at the end of a long hall. The room next door is vacant. The room for his associates, at least two of whom are bodyguards, is registered to Michael Ortiz and it is located on the third floor.

• 10:15 p.m. — Bryant mills around the lobby, largely ignored by hotel employees who have been trained to respect the privacy of celebrity guests.

• 11 p.m. — A 19-year-old woman who works for the hotel as a concierge and receptionist goes off duty.

• 11:13 p.m. — A phone call lasting a few minutes is placed from Bryant's room to what is believed to be his Newport Beach home, where his wife, Vanessa, and young daughter are staying.

• Before midnight: Bryant's accuser goes to his room and stays for an undetermined length of time, according to several hotel employees. Sources differ on the precise time she went to the room.

July 1

• 12:36 a.m. — A pay-per-view movie is ordered in Bryant's room.

• Morning — Bryant undergoes arthroscopy at the Steadman-Hawkins Clinic, which will not divulge the time of the procedure.

• Noon — Accompanied by her parents, Bryant's accuser reports the alleged sexual assault to the Eagle County Sheriff's Department and is taken to Vail Valley Medical Center to undergo tests.

• 2-5 p.m. — Bryant returns from knee surgery and limps through the lobby toward his room. Later, he and his associates lounge in the lobby, playing chess, chatting and tipping well for their food and drink orders.

• 8:50 p.m. — A room service order of $39.01 is placed from Bryant's room.

• 11:10 p.m. — Although room service normally ends at 10:30 p.m., an order of $20.66 is placed from Bryant's room.

• 11:30 p.m. — Eagle County Sheriff's investigators arrive at the Lodge & Spa to interview Bryant and collect evidence from his room. Investigators tell hotel security personnel they are not needed.

July 2

• 2:30 a.m. — Bryant is taken in a sheriff's patrol car from the Lodge & Spa to Valley View Hospital in Glenwood Springs, 52 miles away. His three associates follow in a taxi van, appearing "nervous and anxious," according to driver Terry O'Brien. One tells O'Brien he had to pick up "a friend" having "the worst day of his life." Meanwhile, sheriff's investigators retrieve a hotel computer printout of Bryant's room purchases and phone records and tell employees not to speak publicly about the incident.

• 3 a.m. — Bryant provides samples of DNA at Valley View Hospital. In an effort to protect his privacy, he is tested at the Glenwood Springs facility rather than the much closer medical center in Vail.

• 3:30 a.m. — Bryant leaves the hospital and departs in a taxi with his associates. He covers his head with a towel and O'Brien is asked to keep the interior lights off so Bryant cannot be identified.

• 4:15 a.m. — Bryant and his associates check into the Hotel Colorado in Glenwood Springs.

• 5 a.m. — One of Bryant's associates returns to the Lodge & Spa to recover Bryant's luggage and belongings. He returns to the Hotel Colorado at 5:45 a.m.

• 9:11 a.m. — Bryant is billed $50 by the Lodge & Spa for a manicure appointment he fails to keep because he checked out of the hotel earlier than expected.

• 7:15 p.m. — Bryant and associates leave the Hotel Colorado and take a flight back to Southern California, having been told, his attorneys say, that no arrest warrant will be issued or criminal charges filed until July 7, after the three-day Independence Day weekend.

July 3

• 5:30 p.m. — Eagle County Sheriff Joseph Hoy obtains an arrest warrant from district judge Russell Granger, sparking controversy because he did not go through the usual step of having it signed off by the district attorney, Mark D. Hurlbert.

July 4

• Morning — Bryant's Colorado-based attorney, Pamela Mackey, contacts him by phone in California and says, "You need to come and turn yourself in right now."

• Bryant returns to Eagle County by private plane, accompanied by his wife. He is fingerprinted, interviewed and booked on suspicion of felony sexual assault and false imprisonment at the Eagle County Justice Center. After posting $25,000 bond, he returns home to Newport Beach.

July 6

• The Eagle County Sheriff's Department announces Bryant's arrest. Mackey describes Bryant as distraught, but she says he expects to be exonerated. Laker General Manager Mitch Kupchak says the allegations are "completely out of character of the Kobe Bryant we know."

July 7

• Sheriff Hoy and Hurlbert hold a joint news conference. Says Hoy: "My investigators felt confident they did have evidence to seek the [arrest] paperwork." Says Hurlbert: "Generally, the procedure is [the sheriff] comes to us but there is no law that says he can't go to the judge first. It's possible [Bryant] will be charged with sexual assault. It's possible he will be charged with something else. It's possible he won't be charged with anything."

July 8

• The Colorado Bureau of Investigation receives physical evidence — typically in assault cases hair, blood or swabs or saliva, semen or sweat — from Bryant and his accuser.

July 9

• 1 p.m. — The accuser's father confirms that his daughter, a former Eagle Valley High cheerleader and choir member, has made the allegations against Bryant. Later in the day, police are called to the neighborhood to disperse a crowd of reporters who have gathered at the family's home.

July 12

• Discussing the case for the only time publicly, Bryant tells The Times, "When everything comes clean, it will all be fine, you'll see. But you guys know me, I shouldn't have to say anything. You know I would never do something like that."

July 14

• The sheriff and district attorney's offices begin to receive evidence back from CBI.

July 15

• 4 p.m. — The accuser's father says, "You can't say the D.A. hasn't taken enough time to thoroughly analyze all of this."

July 16

• In their first public appearance since the arrest, Bryant and wife, Vanessa, attend the ESPY Awards, a made-for-television sports awards show, at Hollywood's Kodak Theatre.

July 17

• 1:30 p.m. — A district judge hears arguments that records pertaining to two non-criminal police visits to the accuser's home in the last year be made public. Town manager William Powell acknowledges the visits could have a bearing on the Bryant case. "There is some indirect connection," he says. The judge postpones his decision until July 25.

July 18

• 2:00 p.m. — Kobe Bryant is charged with sexual assaulting a 19-year-old woman who worked at a resort where he was staying at the end of June. After a two-week investigation, Dist. Atty. Mark Hurlbert says at a news conference that Bryant is being charged with one count of sexual assault, a Class 3 felony.

LittleGeneral
07-18-2003, 08:43 PM
It's not the County DA that is investigating the drugs charge.

Oh, ok. That's what I needed to know.

LittleGeneral
07-18-2003, 08:49 PM
July 17

• 1:30 p.m. — A district judge hears arguments that records pertaining to two non-criminal police visits to the accuser's home in the last year be made public. Town manager William Powell acknowledges the visits could have a bearing on the Bryant case. "There is some indirect connection," he says. The judge postpones his decision until July 25.

Anyone have any idea what those visits could be?

goliath
07-18-2003, 08:57 PM
Damn...

Look what our Game 6 ass whopping drove him to.

Guru of Nothing
07-18-2003, 09:32 PM
Remember all the preseason talk last year about Kobe bulking up? Could the drug allegations involve steroid use. Also related is the fact that steroid use is known to induce changes in moods. I don't want to use the word rage, but I wonder if steroid use underlies the rape charge.

Cassius Clay
07-18-2003, 09:33 PM
If the drugs made him lose it, you must acquit?

Guru of Nothing
07-18-2003, 09:38 PM
If the drugs made him lose it, you must acquit?

Not my sentiment, but, if the rape evidence is overwhelming, I can easily see the defense trying this argument - the pressure of being the heir to Jordan drove him to take steroids, which begat rape.

ducks
07-18-2003, 09:41 PM
so that is his out

goliath
07-18-2003, 10:02 PM
Voluntary drug use is not a legal defense. If you were high or drunk and committed the crime, you cant be aquited on that point

Guru of Nothing
07-18-2003, 10:42 PM
Voluntary drug use is not a legal defense. If you were high or drunk and committed the crime, you cant be aquited on that point

True, but, I can still conceive a "weight of the league on my shoulders" defense.

Warning, hard core damage control looms.

Cassius Clay
07-18-2003, 11:03 PM
It's going to be hard for the public to buy any defense along those lines. Even if he got off on that (poor choice of words, I suppose) then he would attain 'OJ status' and the rest of the country would think he's guilty as hell.

The only palusible defense is that she never did anything to indicate that she didn't want to do whatever it is that happened.