Kobe Bryant Sexual Assault Case

Kawailuvr

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Mar 13, 2017
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So just t be clear ,, this guy paid the women $2.5Mil he than throws Shaq under the bus ( complete douchebag move ) than I remember he bought the wife the 4mil pink diamond ring and if you all remember a custom Ferrari or Lambo in ( automatic ) cause his wife couldn’t drive standard lollll ,
So one night of fucking cost this dumb shit 6.5 million plus the ride ? Holly fack that is crazy
I hope he blew his load out his ears on that one ..
That is possible the most expensive pussy I have ever heard of,
Basketball star or not I always thought he came across like a arrogant piece of shit , couldn’t give one sweet fuck he is dead we celebrate these athletes like they are God’s absolutely disgusting
 

Darts

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Jan 15, 2017
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When the news of his death broke, I must admit, I wasn't aware of the sexual assault allegations.

Things may have gone differently, as in sponsors may not have wanted anything to do with him had this happened in the #metoo generation.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kobe_Bryant_sexual_assault_case
For better or worse, it is part of his legacy.

https://www.theatlantic.com/culture/archive/2020/01/kobe-bryants-unfinished-business/605581/

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/26/sports/kobe-bryant-obituary.html
 

K Douglas

Half Man Half Amazing
Jan 5, 2005
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So just t be clear ,, this guy paid the women $2.5Mil he than throws Shaq under the bus ( complete douchebag move ) than I remember he bought the wife the 4mil pink diamond ring and if you all remember a custom Ferrari or Lambo in ( automatic ) cause his wife couldn’t drive standard lollll ,
So one night of fucking cost this dumb shit 6.5 million plus the ride ? Holly fack that is crazy
I hope he blew his load out his ears on that one ..
That is possible the most expensive pussy I have ever heard of,
Basketball star or not I always thought he came across like a arrogant piece of shit , couldn’t give one sweet fuck he is dead we celebrate these athletes like they are God’s absolutely disgusting
For a guy who was, in your books, a heinous person he sure as hell had a ton of people who admired and respected him. His kids. His peers and teammates. Millions of fans. Broadcasters. Owners. I guess they're all heinous people too?
Only Kobe and that girl know what happened in that room that night.
 

shack

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Oct 2, 2001
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For a guy who was, in your books, a heinous person he sure as hell had a ton of people who admired and respected him. His kids. His peers and teammates. Millions of fans. Broadcasters. Owners. I guess they're all heinous people too?
Only Kobe and that girl know what happened in that room that night.
You are feeding a troll.
 

wigglee

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Oct 13, 2010
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There's only 1 point to this thread. And its transparent.
Yes... the point is that he like all of us, was human and not perfect in every way. He appears to have fucked up royally but seems to have smoothed things over and became a better husband and father in addition to being one of the all time greats of B-Ball and overall, a great role model.
 

TeeJay

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Jun 20, 2011
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As far as I know, he did not cheat or bring the game into disrepute. So why would his not getting in even be a point of discussion?
He was married so yes he cheated and doing so brings disrepute to league and team.

He also slept with an underage girl (pedophile) if we want to dig up all the dirt on him. 17 is not legal sorry Kobe.
The goof actually took his parents to court for selling off some of his memorabilia as well.
 

TeeJay

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For a guy who was, in your books, a heinous person he sure as hell had a ton of people who admired and respected him. His kids. His peers and teammates. Millions of fans. Broadcasters. Owners. I guess they're all heinous people too?
Being popular doesn't equate to being great.
Tons of infamous people have millions of supporters; Trump and Hitler spring to mind.
 

lomotil

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Mar 14, 2004
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This thread is one bitch of an obituary. We kick them when they are up, kick them when they are down and even kick them when they are dead having crashed to the ground literally.
 

Smallcock

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Jun 5, 2009
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He was married so yes he cheated and doing so brings disrepute to league and team.

He also slept with an underage girl (pedophile) if we want to dig up all the dirt on him. 17 is not legal sorry Kobe.
The goof actually took his parents to court for selling off some of his memorabilia as well.
She was 19 and he was 24. Get your facts straight.

The irrational hatred for the guy by some has him on par with an alleged murderer OJ, and now as a pedophile. Give it a rest.
 

shack

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Oct 2, 2001
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He was married so yes he cheated and doing so brings disrepute to league and team.
Maybe he cheated at bingo as well.

He did not cheat at playing the game of basketball, no PEDs and no gambling on games.

It is amazing that somebody needed this explained to them. Congratulations for stepping up.
 

shack

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Being popular doesn't equate to being great.
Tons of infamous people have millions of supporters; Trump and Hitler spring to mind.
So you feel that Bryant's career does not qualify him for the HOPF? That is what your posts indicate.
 

shack

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This thread is one bitch of an obituary.
Actually OP appropriately made this a separate thread on this particular topic and it is not part of the obituary/tribute threads previously started.
 

black booty lover

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Oct 21, 2007
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im one of the few people that dont care about sports or celebrities but things like this are a sad indicator of where we are as the human race. i dont know the details of what happened between kobe and this woman and if the facts are that he crossed the line then i truly feel sympathy for the woman as a victim but this situation just proves that no matter how good of a person you are and no matter how much good works you do you are only as good as the worst thing you have done. you could kill 1 person and save 100 but all you will ever be remembered as is a cold blooded murderer. such a sad state of affairs...
Jesus Christ...

Are you for real??
 

blueray

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Apr 15, 2008
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Very interesting article...take the time to read it and comment back....or at least the bold parts.....

https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/kobe-bryant-sex-assault-allegations-1.5442027

'Not now. Then when?': Kobe Bryant's death prompts battle over focus on star's rape charge

Mark Gollom · CBC News · Posted: Jan 28, 2020 5:59 PM ET | Last Updated: January 28

For author and attorney Mark Shaw, there's one memory of Kobe Bryant seared into his brain — that of a young basketball star seated in a Colorado courtroom with what he perceived as a flippant attitude to the charge of sexual assault against him.

"Here was Kobe with an arrogant look on his face," said Shaw, who covered the case for ESPN in 2004.

"It bothered me and it bothered all of the other reporters. He wasn't taking this seriously at all. I don't know if he was in denial or whatever, but he just didn't take it seriously."

Shaw, who is convinced of Bryant's guilt, said he is particularly bothered by the coverage of Bryant's death, that not enough emphasis has been placed on this part of the athlete's life.

The tragic death of Bryant, along with his 13-year-old daughter and seven others in a helicopter crash Sunday, has sparked an outpouring of grief and tributes for the basketball great who helped lead the Los Angeles Lakers to five NBA titles during his 20-year career. But others have been quick to note that Bryant's legacy is also marked by an allegation of sexual assault. And that, in turn, has sparked a backlash from some fans angered that the allegations were revisited so soon after his death.


"When someone passes away, certainly you want to highlight what they did well in life. And apparently he did kind of turn his life around from that point and became a great father, and the things that he's done and all of that, that's great," said Shaw.

"But you just need to tell both sides of the story. A lot of times people just don't want to really know the truth. They would rather discard that and only look at the positives that were involved with somebody's life."


Indeed, a Washington Post reporter faced considerable social media backlash and death threats after she tweeted a link to an old article about the sexual assault allegation against Bryant shortly after he was killed. (Felicia Sonmez was suspended by the paper, which then seemed to back off on Tuesday.)

Jill Filipovic, lawyer and author of The H-Spot: The Feminist Pursuit of Happiness, said it's possible to "grieve a life lost and also address that life honestly."

"To everyone yelling NOT NOW: Then when? When are we supposed to grapple with, and tell the whole truth about, the lives of people many admire?" she tweeted Sunday.


In a blog posted titled Kobe Bryant and Complicated Legacies, Filipovic wrote that all of his success in sports is "key to Kobe's story" but also "is not the whole story."

"Out of some mislaid definition of 'respect,' we are so excellent at sidelining the inconvenient parts, at least when the inconvenient parts are women we've made invisible and the one inconvenienced is a man we would prefer to keep admiring, without complication," she wrote.


In 2003, Bryant was charged with sexually assaulting a 19-year-old employee at a Colorado resort. He had said the two had consensual sex. Prosecutors later dropped the felony sexual assault charge at the request of the accuser, in exchange for a public apology. Bryant also settled a civil suit against him by the accuser for an undisclosed amount of money.

While some endorsements dried up, including McDonald's, other major companies like Nike stuck by Bryant. He was largely able to put the allegations behind him, going on to have one of the most successful careers in the NBA, eventually retiring in 2016 as the third-leading scorer in the league's history.


However, in the wake of the #MeToo movement, those allegations resurfaced. In March 2018, after he won an Oscar for the short animated film Dear Basketball, based on a poem he wrote, some criticized the Academy for its selection. And in Oct. 2018, he was ousted from the jury of an animated film festival after an online petition was circulated demanding he be dropped.

Shaw said in recounting Bryant's legacy, it's fine to talk about how Bryant seemed to change his ways following the alleged attack.

"I think you can do it in a way where you say despite him being charged with sexual assault ... Kobe Bryant had become a changed man. I think you can put a positive spin on this — but it does need to include this incident that happened back then."


Globe and Mail investigative reporter Robyn Doolittle, whose recent book Had it Coming: What's Fair in the Age of #MeToo? includes a chapter about the Bryant case, said it's important to remember someone like Bryant as a whole person.

"He can be a basketball legend, and it means so much to so many people, and he can also be an amazing father, by all accounts. He can also be someone who faced very credible sexual assault or rape allegations," she said.

"I don't necessarily think that people should hate Kobe Bryant. My book is all about 'It's not black or white. The hot take isn't necessarily the most productive one.'"


His death, the outpouring of grief, and what some might say is an effort by fans to ignore the most controversial chapter of his life is illustrative of the intense relationship many have with their celebrity idols, said Bradley Bond, a University of San Diego associate professor in communication studies.

Bond studies the psychological concept known as parasocial relationship: the way people develop very strong social and emotional ties to fictional characters and celebrities.

The nature of entertainment media is to continually disclose information about these people, and the public feels like they get to know them over the course of time, he said.

"So it makes sense that when one of those perceived relationships dissolves that we experience grief in a similar way."


And when a celebrity does something that conflicts with one's own moral code, it either negatively influences the relationship or fans find a way to close that cognitive dissonance with some type of excuse, Bond said.

"I think the easiest case with something like Kobe's complicated background is to simply not believe the accuser."

As well, fans may also be able to separate an actor or athlete's personal life with their performance.

"You can still admire that primary attribute even if secondary attributes might conflict with what you see as an admirable person. I think you can separate Kobe the athlete from Kobe the individual."
 
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