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Drinking arrests poor lesson for Irish athletes

Party wasn't public disturbance, so what prompted excessive police display?

Image: Golic, Yeatman
These photos provided by the St. Joseph County Police Department show mug shots of Notre Dame center Michael Golic, Jr., and tight end Will Yeatman.
Byline Title: Ho / AP
OPINION
By John Walters
NBCSports.com
updated 2:47 a.m. ET Sept. 23, 2008

Image: John Walters
John Walters
SOUTH BEND, Ind. - The drab, two-story brick home on the corner of E. Colfax and St. Louis Streets sat silent on Monday afternoon. But in Sunday morning's early hours this South Bend residence was the scene of a massive police raid that netted 37 arrests.

“There were at least 20 police officers there, maybe more,” said a Notre Dame senior who lives in the house next door. “They took everyone down to the police station in buses.”

It sounds as if the Notre Dame senior lives next door to a crack house. Actually, his neighbors are approximately eight current or former members of the Notre Dame women’s lacrosse team. The women hosted a get-together that drew members of the men’s lacrosse team as well as two members of the Notre Dame football team, junior tight end Will Yeatman and freshman offensive lineman Mike Golic, Jr. (Yeatman is also a member of the men’s lacrosse team, its top scorer as a freshman in 2007.)

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Some time between 1 a.m. and 2 a.m. Sunday morning, county and state police raided the party. Adjoining neighbors had not complained about excess noise or any disturbances, drunken or otherwise.

The St. Joe County Police issued a statement after the arrests. It read in part that a task force was “targeting local establishments for complaints received by Indiana State Excise Police. While en route to a location on list (sic), an officer drove by the location of Colfax Ave. and St. Louis Blvd. in South Bend and observed what appeared to be several underage people drinking.”

Of the 37 Notre Dame students arrested, 16 are varsity athletes. Besides Golic and Yeatman, officers arrested five current (and two former) members of the women’s lacrosse team; eight members of the men’s lacrosse team; and women’s basketball player Brittany Mallory who, like Golic and Yeatman, is underage.

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Five of the 37 students arrested are actually 21 years old. All of those are current or former varsity athletes. Men’s lacrosse player Scott Rodgers was cited for “resisting arrest.” Women's lacrosse players Shannon Burke, Lauren deMello, Beth Koloup and ex-teammate Mary Veith were all cited for “maintaining a common nuisance.”

A common nuisance may be how many Notre Dame students, particularly those who live off-campus, would describe the police presence here. That consuming alcohol before the age of 21 is illegal is not in question. And certainly anyone who attempts to drive while legally impaired is endangering the lives of others as well as himself.

However, it is hard not to consider Saturday's police presence excessive. And repressive. A multi-agency operation that included members of the SUDS (Stop Underage Drinking and Sales) task force, the St. Joseph’s County Police Reserves, the Indiana State Excise Police and the Indiana State Police all converged on the home. Canine units were also present.

According to Sgt. William Redman of the St. Joseph County Police, once officers arrived they “discovered several underage people that were in fact drinking alcohol. A total of three empty kegs of beer were found at the home along with hundreds of empty beer cans and drinking cups both inside and outside the residence. The individuals at the home began to scatter and many hid inside the home. Officers obtained permission to enter the home from the students renting the home. Once inside the home, officers found people hiding under beds, in closets, the attic, and in the basement.”

I know what you’re thinking: Why did the students ever give police permission to enter the home? State school kids are way smarter than that. Notre Dame students, by and large, are law-abiding. Respectful of authority. Chances are that the female lacrosse players who are renting the home on 702 E. Colfax were scared and/or intimidated by so many uniformed officers. And, being Notre Dame students, they wanted to follow the rules.

The Notre Dame students who live next door arrived home at around 2 a.m. to the surreal scene. As they stood on their front porch surveying their classmates being led onto the buses, one officer ordered them to “go inside your house.”

One student protested that he was 21 years old, and noted that he was standing on his own property.

“Do you want to go down to the station, too?” a police officer asked.


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