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fcspikeit
01-27-2009, 04:34 AM
By BRETT BARROUQUERE – 4 days ago

Ky. high school coach charged in player's death (http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jxErGcZEn4iTyjZ95atiOZmKg3aAD95SJIA00)


LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — A Kentucky high school football coach was charged Thursday with reckless homicide in the death of a player who collapsed during a sweltering practice in a rare criminal case against a coach in a heat death.

A grand jury indicted David Jason Stinson in the death of Pleasure Ridge Park offensive lineman Max Gilpin. Stinson, in his first year as head coach at the Louisville school, was directing practice on Aug. 20 when the 15-year-old sophomore collapsed and had trouble breathing. The heat index, a measure of how hot it feels based on temperature and humidity, was 94 degrees that day.

The player had a temperature of 107 degrees when he arrived at the hospital, authorities said, and died three days later. No autopsy was performed, but it appeared Gilpin died from complications from heat stroke, according to the coroner's office.

Assistant coach Steve Deacon called 911 and told a dispatcher that Gilpin was semiconscious and that his father was nearby, according to a transcript of the call.

"He's just overheated ... and we've got water on him ... he's responsive and he's got a big rapid pulse but ..." Deacon said. "... He keeps going ... yeah he's awake ... we're trying to get him to open his eyes right now ... he's got a rapid pulse."

In the background, someone is urging Gilpin: "Come on get them eyes open ... keep them eyes open ... there you go ... get them eyes all the way up ... get them eyes open ... there you go."

Heat exposure deaths happen occasionally in all levels of football, with the most famous example being Minnesota Vikings offensive lineman Korey Stringer in 2001. The cases have led to numerous lawsuits, however, no evidence can be found that a coach has ever been charged in the deaths.

The reckless homicide charge means grand jurors didn't find that Stinson's actions intentional or malicious, said Jefferson County Commonwealth's Attorney Dave Stengel, but that "a reasonable man should have realized something like this could have occurred."

Stinson's attorney, Alex Dathorne, told The Associated Press that the coach maintains his innocence and looks forward to "bringing out the whole story."

"We're certainly disappointed in the grand jury's decision to indict," Dathorne said.

Stinson spent his first three years at Pleasure Ridge Park as an assistant football coach, before taking over last season and going 4-4. A school spokeswoman says he has been reassigned pending the outcome of the case. Stinson will surrender Monday at his arraignment and likely will remain free pending trial, Stengel said.

Attorneys representing Gilpin's divorced parents, Michele Crockett and Jeff Gilpin, said in a statement that the school system and high school haven't provided information on the player's death to the family.

"But what we have learned about the coaches' conduct at the football practice that led to Max's collapse and death is inexcusable, as was the lack of urgency and the delay in seeking medical treatment after Max collapsed and never regained consciousness," the statement from attorneys Todd Thompson and Mike Cooper said.

Gilpin's parents sued Stinson and five assistant coaches in state court accusing them of negligence and "reckless disregard." The five assistants were not charged in the indictment, and Stengel said they didn't commit a crime.

From 1960 through 2007, there were 114 heat stroke cases that resulted in death on all levels of football from sandlot to the pros, according to a report compiled by Dr. Frederick Mueller at the University of North Carolina for the American Football Coaches Association in February 2008.

From 2003-07, he attributed 16 deaths to heat stroke, and both cases in 2007 were in high school. A report on the past season wasn't included and Mueller did not immediately return a call from The Associated Press on Thursday afternoon.

Along with the lawsuit and criminal investigation, the school system has been looking into the case, but the results have not been released.

Stinson asked to testify in front of the grand jurors but they declined to hear him, only listening to testimony from a Louisville Metro Police detective, Stengel said.

What are your thoughts on this?

fcspikeit
01-27-2009, 04:38 AM
More on the story..

http://www.newyorksportswriters.org/blog/blog-2009-01-25b.shtml


Jan. 25, 2009 (Bonus blog): Kentucky coach charged in player's death speaks out
Leading off today: The Kentucky high school football coach charged last week with reckless homicide in the death of a player who collapsed at practice says he is heartbroken by the tragedy.

"The one thing people can't forget in this whole situation is that I lost one of my boys that day. A boy that I loved and a boy that I cared for and a boy that meant the world to me," coach David Jason Stinson told supporters last night. "That's the thing that people forget and don't ever forget that. That's a burden I will carry with me for the rest of my life."

Stinson was charged Thursday in the death of Max Gilpin, 15, a sophomore offensive lineman at Pleasure Ridge Park High who died three days after collapsing during practice Aug. 20. Although there have been civil suits following other deaths, Stinson is believed to be the first coach to face criminal charges in a heat-related death. Gilpin's family has filed a civil suit as well.

Stinson was indicted Thursday by a Jefferson County grand jury and is expected to be arraigned Monday. At least one report suggests he withhold water from the team during a workout in 90-degree heat; it is not known whether Gilpin, whose body temperature reached 107 degrees, had any underlying conditions that might have contributed to his death, but a second player fell ill during the same practice and was hospitalized for two days.

If convicted, Stinson could be sentenced to five years in prison. That's a reality that has sent shock waves through the coaching profession.

"My first instinct: What is the next thing? If a kid has a serious head injury, we didn't teach tackling right?" New Paltz coach Tom Tegeler told The Times Herald-Record. "That would be my initial reaction. My secondary reaction is: I need to know more information."

Section 11 has a "10 and 5" rule requiring that practices end at 10 a.m. and/or begin after 5 p.m. Suffolk and Nassau counties require frequent water breaks during practices.

"We don't go in the heat of the day, and that cuts down on the problem," William Floyd coach Paul Longo told Newsday. "We also have heat alerts that would cancel practice if Section XI decides it's too hot or too humid." Dr. Fred Mueller, director of the National Center for Catastrophic Sports Injury Research at University of North Carolina, said the indictment will be "an eye opener" for coaches.

Northman
01-27-2009, 06:10 AM
My thoughts on this is with the Stringer case that is a full grown man who chose not to go and sit down or rest. In this instance with a kid, i place blame more on the adult in charge. I doubt they will find him guilty but i do believe some kind of punishment is warranted here.

NightTrainLayne
01-27-2009, 11:01 AM
It's such a fine line. I can remember running so much in football practice that I threw up several times in one practice. . .I didn't even THINK of raising my hand and asking for rest. .. Figured I would tough it out.

After the practice, after some of the other guys were talking about me puking and one of the coaches overheard, he came over and told me "that is one of the few excuses to get out of running. Next time tell me."

Well. . had something happened to me, yes they were in charge, but I didn't bring it to their attention. It's hard for them to be mind-readers.

Who knows what happened here, but I can see how this could happen without the coach even being aware of it.

fcspikeit
01-28-2009, 04:10 AM
I have mixed feeling about this,

If it is proven the coach was warned by the team doctor to end practice and he didn't there is blame there. If he withheld water from the players there is blame there..

Here's the thing, why was it only the one kid who got heat stroke? Was there something wrong with him? Obviously there has to be something that separated him from the other kids.. If there was something wrong with him, that's not the coaches fault. Every kid must take a physical before joining the team. Obviously the school doctor or his personal doctor passed him, shouldn't they be to blame?

The coach takes all the kids assuming they are fit to play/practice in normal circumstances. So either, these weren't normal circumstances or someone missed something.. Again, if they weren't normal circumstances, why was he the only kid to go down with heat stroke?

I am worried this is going to open the door to a lot of other liability and or criminal suits/cases, we have seen these types of things in the past where once the door opens, it's a mud slide with no way of going back... Every case becomes an interpretation of the law(s). Once they are interpreted to mean something, it becomes the rule, the only way you can do away with that rule is the interpretation must be found as incorrect by a higher judge/court..

CoachChaz
01-28-2009, 04:12 PM
Prove to me that the coach withheld this kid from drinking water or physically forced the kid to continue beyond his means and I'll be first in line to stone him.

I coached soccer in Texas for 12 years. The sport that requires the most running in one of the hottest and most humid states in the union. I was always paying attention to the kids and how they reacted in the heat, but it would have been nothing for them to drop on me at any moment. I made sure they drank LOTS of water, but if they didnt drink much before practice...that was out of my control.

If any of my kids would have collapsed or died, I would have been devastated...but I dont think I've ever done anything to them that would have harmfully put them in that situation

KCL
01-28-2009, 04:24 PM
I have mixed feeling about this,

If it is proven the coach was warned by the team doctor to end practice and he didn't there is blame there. If he withheld water from the players there is blame there..

Here's the thing, why was it only the one kid who got heat stroke? Was there something wrong with him? Obviously there has to be something that separated him from the other kids.. If there was something wrong with him, that's not the coaches fault. Every kid must take a physical before joining the team. Obviously the school doctor or his personal doctor passed him, shouldn't they be to blame?

The coach takes all the kids assuming they are fit to play/practice in normal circumstances. So either, these weren't normal circumstances or someone missed something.. Again, if they weren't normal circumstances, why was he the only kid to go down with heat stroke?

I am worried this is going to open the door to a lot of other liability and or criminal suits/cases, we have seen these types of things in the past where once the door opens, it's a mud slide with no way of going back... Every case becomes an interpretation of the law(s). Once they are interpreted to mean something, it becomes the rule, the only way you can do away with that rule is the interpretation must be found as incorrect by a higher judge/court..

My thought was also...was there something wrong with this kid? It's a sad deal.Why was there no autopsy done?

fcspikeit
01-28-2009, 05:21 PM
My thought was also...was there something wrong with this kid? It's a sad deal.Why was there no autopsy done?

My guess would be the parents didn't want one done... Beings there is a criminal case you would think the court would have ordered it. If there was something found to be wrong with the kid, the blame would have to shift from the coach, It can't be his responsibility to look into the back ground of each players health. All he can do is go with what is told to him.. If he got a clean bill of health, he shouldn't be expected to assume anything except that he is fit to practice along with the other kids..

I know some kids who had medical problems but they kept them hid, they knew if they came out, they wouldn't be allowed to play as much as they wanted, in a lot of cases the parents helped hide the problems from the coach..