THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOS ANGELES — Dodger Stadium was flooded with blue Thursday night, both the Los Angeles Dodgers kind and the LAPD variety, as the team and police cracked down on the kind of hooliganism that nearly killed a San Francisco Giants fan last month.
Three hours before the Los Angeles Dodgers and St. Louis Cardinals were to begin playing, more than four dozen black-and-white patrol cars were lined up in an impressive formation in a parking lot down a hill from the stadium’s left-field pavilion. As police helicopters whirled overhead, more police officers on motorcycles, and still more on bicycles, circled the cavernous, nearly empty parking lot repeatedly.
Police Chief Charlie Beck said there would be still more inside the stadium, in plainclothes, for the game.
"If you’re threatening, if you’re making comments that could lead to violence, you’re going to get ejected," he said at a news conference behind the pavilion.
The crackdown was in response to the beating suffered by Bryan Stow of Santa Cruz as he left an opening day game against the Giants with friends.
Stow, who was walking with friends, was attacked from behind and kicked and beaten by two men in Dodger jerseys. Just before the beating he had sent a text message to a family member to say he feared for his safety in the raucous crowd,
No one has been arrested despite the offer of more than US$150,000 in reward money from the Dodgers, Giants, Stow’s employer and others, including Giants’ pitching ace Tim Lincecum.
The attack provoked a torrent of anger from fans who complained that in recent years the stadium has become a dangerous den of drunken hooliganism where fights regularly break out in the stands and anyone who dares wear a rival team’s jersey is subjected to profane verbal abuse and threats of violence.
Beck and Dodgers owner Frank McCourt said crime at the ballpark has decreased in recent years but that reports of drunken, abusive behaviour has led many fans to believe otherwise. Stow’s beating was, for fans, the last straw.
Beck said that a zero-tolerance policy was being adopted toward abusive behaviour.
"I have undercover officers in the stadium. You don’t know whose listening to you. So you should act appropriately," he warned.
Although Beck said there won’t always be such a massive police presence at Dodgers games as there was Thursday, McCourt said the team is taking measures of its own to ensure things stay calm in and outside the stadium.
The team is installing more than 40 additional lighting fixtures in the parking lot and looking into adding surveillance as well. People who appear to have had too much to drink will be approached politely by security officers and told so, he said. Rowdy fans, even season ticket holders, will be thrown out.
Meanwhile, this year’s planned half-priced beer promotion for a half-dozen games has been scrapped.
McCourt said he hoped the measures take what is a heartbreaking event and turn it into something positive."
parking lot following the teams’ season opener last month.