
Reflective Sha'Carri Richardson apologizes for airport incident
"I'm taking this time to not only see myself but get myself a certain level of help that overall is going to reflect who I truly am in my heart and my spirit and not allowing this moment -- but accepting this moment -- to be more," Richardson said in an Instagram post Monday night.
Richardson, 25, won silver in the 100m at the Paris Olympics and was on the gold medal-winning 4x100 relay team.
She was arrested after officers at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport reviewed security video that showed her appearing to grab Coleman's backpack and shove him toward a wall while he was attempting to move through the terminal.
Richardson posted a one-line comment to Twitter on the afternoon of the arrest that read in all caps: I WILL ALWAYS GET BACK UP!!!
She said Monday night in her first public comments on the matter that she appreciated being held accountable.
"More than anything, definitely a lot of self reflection, a lot of understanding of not only putting myself in a compromising situation with somebody that I have a deep care and appreciation for as well, is something that -- holding myself accountable," Richardson said in the video that appeared on her Instagram story.
"So my only thing is, I want to be more -- not just only for myself, for my family, my fans. I overly appreciate y'all supporting me and showing love and even holding me accountable to being my best self. So more than anything, I refused to run away ... but face everything that comes to me head-on because everything on the other side is greater but you gotta go through in order to get there."
Richardson issued an apology to Coleman that read in part, "I apologize to Christian. He came into my life and gave me more than a relationship but a greater understanding of unconditional love from what I've experienced in my past. Due to my past trauma and pain, I was blind and blocked off to not only receive it but give it. I love him and to him I can't apologize enough."
As security footage of the incident became public, Coleman told The Athletic in a video interview, "She's a human being, and a great person. She has a lot of things going on, a lot of emotions and forces going on inside of her that not only I can't understand, but nobody can. She's one of one. And I'm one of one too.
"I feel like it was just a sucky situation all around, I don't feel as if she should have been arrested."
--Field Level Media
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27 minutes ago
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Trump Tower, built in 1983, became the city's tallest residential building. Twenty storeys higher than its original zoning allowed, after Trump had acquired unexploited 'air rights' from the neighbouring Tiffany store, the Tower was a shimmering symbol of New York's economic revival, and a testament to Trump's soaring hubris. To lure buyers, he numbered the floors to make them seem higher than they actually were. The first residential floor, which was 20 storeys above street level, was labelled the 30th floor. Among the eager buyers were a high-ranking member of a Russian crime family, a notorious cocaine dealer and the mob-connected head of a numbers racket. Unfazed by his failed attempts as a casino operator to make Atlantic City a rival to Reno, Trump had fixed his eye on bigger things. 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His portly figure, pompadour hairstyle and predilection for colourful tracksuits, often worn with a gold medallion bearing the image of Martin Luther King, served as a beacon for reporters and tv crews. In 1987, Tawana Brawley, a 15-year-old black girl who had been missing from her home for four days, was found seemingly unconscious, lying in a garbage bag, her clothing torn, her body smeared in faeces, with the initials KKK scrawled on her body in charcoal. She alleged that she had been kidnapped and sexually abused by a group of white men. Sharpton stepped forward, orchestrating the media coverage, describing Brawley as 'the symbol of the cause' and, as the investigation ground on, inflaming the situation even more by suggesting that the Ku Klux Klan and the Mafia were conspiring with the authorities in a cover-up. After 10 months, a Grand Jury ruled there was no evidence of Brawley being being abducted and abused, and had made up the story of abduction and rape to avoid facing her mother's violent boyfriend. Sharpton simply shrugged his shoulders, brushed the verdict aside as a miscarriage of justice, and moved on to his next agitation. Between crime, corruption, Aids and racial conflict, a beleaguered Koch was fighting on all fronts. But few of the many thorns in his side were more painful than a homeless woman named Joyce Brown, who had taken up residence on the pavement outside an ice-cream parlour in Midtown Manhattan, shouting obscenities at passers-by and responding to the kindness of strangers who gave her dollar bills by urinating on the money. In 1987, Brown became the first person to be incarcerated in Bellevue hospital, under an emergency programme introduced by a desperate Koch to forcibly commit the mentally disturbed homeless to psychiatric hospitals. Her incarceration became a cause célèbre, with thousands of homeless people marching through Midtown, chanting her name and demanding more affordable housing. Released from hospital, she appeared on TV shows, addressed a packed audience at Harvard Law School and taunted Koch in interviews, accusing him of having a 'personality disorder', while her lawyers fielded calls from publishers and movie agents. On a visit to Moscow, President Reagan cited Brown's successful campaign to be released and return to her spot on the pavement as a symbol of America as a free country. 'How far can we go in impinging on the freedom of someone who says this is the way I want to live.' Brown was unimpressed. 'Rather than talking about me', she was quoted as saying, 'why doesn't the President assist me in getting permanent housing?' Being painted as the heartless persecutor of a mentally disturbed homeless person was another dent in Koch's fading reputation. Despite having promised to 'keep my big mouth shut' if he won re-election, in 1989 he lost to David Dinkins, who became the city's first black mayor. That's where Mahler's book ends. But the story continues. Dinkins was to prove a one-term mayor. And waiting in the wings was Rudy Giuliani. A workaholic who subsisted on a diet of cheeseburgers by day and martinis by night, with a complexion so pallid a judge had once urged him to 'sit at Coney Island and get some colour', as US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Giuliani had achieved the apparently impossible. His tenacious pursuit and successful prosecution of the bosses of New York's most powerful Mafia families led Time magazine to describe him as resembling 'a quattrocento fresco of an obscure saint'. Meanwhile in 1986, he aided in the prosecution and imprisonment, on charges of insider trading, of the crooked arbitrageur Ivan Boesky, who had been involved in almost every major takeover of the previous five years, as well as the successful prosecution of the investment bank Drexel Burnham Lambert, which served as a welcome corrective to what Mahler describes as the 'greed-soaked, rule-bending era' on Wall Street. Giuliani had always nursed political ambitions and having run unsuccessfully as a Republican candidate in the 1989 mayoral elections, four years later he succeeded Dinkins as New York's mayor. In 2001, he went one step better, being lauded as 'America's mayor' for his leadership after 9/11. Then came the fall. The man who had made his name rooting out corruption ended up paying fealty to Donald Trump, representing him in the multitude of lawsuits Trump filed following the 2020 election, claiming the election had been rigged from an improvised podium in front of a porn store, hair dye leaking into his eyes. In 2023, Giuliani lost a $148-million defamation lawsuit after accusing two election workers in Georgia of lying to help steal the 2020 presidential contest from Donald Trump. In court, Giuliani pleaded poverty, telling a judge he had no car, credit card or cash. Mahler's account of corruption, riots and fortunes and reputations made and lost will stand as the definitive account of New York in the 80s, and proof that the feet of the gods, or those who believe they are, are indeed made of clay – but that still doesn't stop one of them becoming the most powerful man in the world.