1) Involved in what. He was completely involved in the robbery. The county attorney is saying he wasn't involved in the murder and the family appears to agree.DCC2MSU wrote:1) To say he had no involvement is very likely a huge assumption.crazycat wrote:In case you haven't read the entire thread, and apparently you haven't, I've said that I'm NOT trying to portray Lebrum as a saint. But people, several Griz posters and some of our own, used this murder to portray MSU football in a bad light. Lebrum may be the biggest bum on the planet, but for those that insist on portraying him as a murderer and associating him with MSU football, I think this thread is pretty relevant. Say what you want about basketball. Miller actually played and was a star on the hoop team, unlike Lebrum who was a red-shirt for one year and never saw the field, let alone become a star.kstack wrote:Man, this is nothing for MSU faithful to be proud of. Lebrum is a punk and has embarrassed the MSU athletics program and the school murder charge or not.crazycat wrote:OK. For all you people who smacked around the MSU football team over this Wright murder here's your opportunity to eat crow. The murder charges were dropped against former red-shirt Lebrum.
Actually the Associated Press should lead off. How many times did they tack onto the end of their stories a reference to MSU football and this murder?
I know, I know this doesn't get rid of the other issues (drugs, APR).
The football program took a lot of flack for this crime. Now that it turns out the football program probably wasn't involved, the murder as it relates to anyone from the football program, may very well have not happened. Robbery? Yes. Murder? No. Robbery is a pretty heinous act, but it's not murder.
2) Someone doesn't have to be a 'star' to be part of the football program.
3) Expecting people to apologize for thinking a person is a murderer, when he may only be an accessory and was involved in the robbery that led to the murder, is probably not the best way to get people to move on. In fact, I would say it does a damn fine job of keeping it fresh in people's minds. But if that is what your goal was, then job well done.
I don't see a way anyone - the 3 individuals directly involved, the additional athletes indirectly involved, or MSU - comes out looking good.
2) People were calling him a star, when in reality he was on the team as a red-shirt. Quite a disparity. Travis Lulay was a star. Is Lebrum in his class?
3) No it started as smack, so I didn't really expect an apology. I pretty much expected what I got. Quite a few people who are bummed out that their assumption of the case was probably incorrect. They wanted to believe that Lebrum (a person associated with MSU football) was a murderer. This is just a reminder of that. I don't think this post is prolonging any pain that MSU has suffered over this case. The damage has been done. Unfortunatley, nothing I post on this web site will ever change that. No one will come out looking good. That's a given.