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Jim Irsay transformed his battle with addiction to support others

Jim Irsay transformed his battle with addiction to support others

INDIANAPOLIS — Colts owner Jim Irsay took his battle with addiction to the very end.
But Irsay was able to change the terms of the fight over the years, taking a fight that had been personal and transforming it into a public crusade, the centerpiece of his lengthy and legendary list of philanthropic efforts, both in the city of Indianapolis and on a national level.
Irsay, who died on Wednesday at the age of 65, saw an opportunity in his own story to change the culture's perception of addiction, culminating with the establishment of the Kicking the Stigma campaign in 2020.
'These are fatal diseases,' Irsay told IndyStar's Gregg Doyel in 2022. 'People get confused and they think, 'Well, he likes to party. Do some coke, do some shots, dance around.' It's nothing to do with that. This isn't partying. This is a downbound train in the dark.'
Irsay was remarkably open about his own addiction.
He saw the danger and destruction of the illness in his own life and those of his friends.
The alcoholism he battled into his early years as the team's owner. The painkillers that grabbed hold after a string of surgeries related to the football he played at SMU and his powerlifting career in the '80's.
Irsay was arrested in March of 2014 with prescription medication and $29,029 in cash, pled guilty to operating a vehicle while intoxicated and admitted to having hydrocodone, oxycodone and alprazolam in his system, a result Irsay attributed to recent hip surgery. The Colts owner has repeatedly said he's been to rehab at least 15 times, and he told HBO's 'Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel' in 2023 that he'd overdosed once.
'What it really comes down to is any fatal disease is difficult to deal with,' Irsay said. 'The tough issue here is that we as human beings are making it harder on other human beings that are suffering.'
Irsay responded by celebrating and supporting the institutions dedicated to fighting addiction, by talking about his own history of addiction publicly and finally by founding Kicking the Stigma, a movement dedicated to removing the barriers surrounding all mental illnesses, including addiction.
One of Irsay's prize possessions was the Big Book, a tract containing the doctrine that led to the foundation of Alcoholics Anonymous, an organization that helped Irsay overcome alcoholism. His interviews about his own battle with addiction stressed that addiction is an illness.
Ultimately, the foundation of Kicking the Stigma was the culmination of everything he'd done.
Kicking the Stigma is about all forms of mental illness, and the $31 million that has been committed to mental health awareness, organizations and research, along with $6.4 million in action grants distributed to mental health nonprofits, have targeted all forms of mental illness. The Colts have also championed and supported their players through a wide range of mental illness that has not included addiction.
But by using the example of his own life, Irsay always made sure that addiction was included, pointing out that addiction is often viewed as a demon, rather than an illness.
'People are afraid, they're scared, they're lonely, they're outgunned,' Irsay said. 'They need support in a big way.'
Irsay had been in their shoes.
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Revisiting most severe punishments in college football history after Michigan saga closes
Revisiting most severe punishments in college football history after Michigan saga closes

USA Today

time2 days ago

  • USA Today

Revisiting most severe punishments in college football history after Michigan saga closes

The NCAA closed a two-year investigation into the Michigan football program on Aug. 15 with the release of its findings and punishments for the Wolverines' sign-stealing scandal. Started in the 2023 college football season, when former Michigan staffer Connor Stalions − who spearheaded the program's in-person scouting operation − the Wolverines had been under investigation by the NCAA and its Committee on Infractions for a considerable amount of time. Some of the punishments handed down by the NCAA to Michigan included a $50,000 fine and the forfeiture of 2025 and 2026 College Football Playoff revenue sharing; a two-year show-cause order and a one-game suspension for head coach Sherrone Moore in the 2026 season (in addition to two school-imposed games to be served in 2025); and an eight-year show-cause order for Stalions. 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Former Mustang David Stanley, who was kicked off the team and lost his scholarship, then disclosed to a local news station that he and his family received payments from SMU in an interview and this allowed the NCAA to catch SMU. Given the severity of the case, here's a full list of penalties SMU was handed: The NCAA's death penalty has not been implemented since, and has only been considered in extreme cases. REQUIRED READING: Why didn't Michigan football receive a postseason ban from NCAA for sign-stealing scandal? Alabama Textbook Scandal The Alabama Textbook Scandal refers to when student-athletes from 16 different Alabama programs, including the football team, were improperly obtaining free textbooks and then giving them to other students Noted by ESPN, Alabama's football team was forced to vacate 21 football victories that came under former Crimson Tide coaches Mike Shula and Nick Saban. 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Alabama cooperated with the NCAA's investigation, and the sanctions ultimately led to Franchione leaving the Tide to join Texas A&M. As noted by the Tuscaloosa News, part of the USA TODAY Network, late Alabama booster Logan Young was accused of paying Albert Means $150,000 through his coach Lynn Lang. Ohio State "Tattoogate" "Tattoogate" refers to a scandal involving Ohio State in 2010 under former Buckeyes coach Jim Tressel, which ultimately led to his departure in Columbus a year later. In 2010, five Ohio State players, known as the "Tat 5", were involved in a scandal that included selling some of their memorabilia and team-issued merchandise from Ohio State for cash and tattoos at a nearby tattoo parlor on the West Side of Columbus. The five prominent players were Mike Adams, Daniel Herron, DeVier Posey, quarterback Terrelle Pryor and Solomon Thomas. For this, the players were suspended by the NCAA for the first five games of the 2011 season and were required to repay Ohio State the money they received from the memorabilia sales in monthly installments. A sixth player, freshman linebacker Jordan Whiting, who received a discount on tattoos, was also involved and had to sit out the first game of the 2011 season and pay $150 to a charity. Since he was aware of the free tattoos and did not inform administrators at Ohio State of it and had signed an NCAA form certifying that he had no knowledge of violations, "Tattoogate" began the ticking time clock on Tressel's time in Columbus. Tressel was forced to resign in May of 2011. REQUIRED READING: Is Michigan coach Sherrone Moore suspended for Week 1? He will be at New Mexico game More notably, Ohio State suffered a one-year bowl ban for the infractions, which would prove to be hugely consequential. In Urban Meyer's debut season in Columbus, Ohio State went 12-0 but could not play in the BCS National Championship. Alabama would roll Notre Dame 42-14. Ohio State's 2010 season was also vacated, expunging a 12-1 season and a Sugar Bowl win. USC infractions under Pete Carroll Before he returned to the NFL in 2010 as the then-Seattle Seahawks coach, Pete Carroll was involved with one of the biggest scandals in college football history at USC, one of the sport's most well-known brands. Previously reported by USA TODAY, Yahoo Sports reported in the fall of 2006 that former USC running back Reggie Bush, who was drafted No. 2 overall by the New Orleans Saints in 2006, and his family received payments of over $100,000 from agents while enrolled at USC. The benefits that Bush received included weekly payments and a year of rent-free living at the California home of Michael Michaels, who was attempting to make Bush a client of his after he graduated from college. In other words, Bush was at the center of a pay-for-play scandal, which is against NCAA rules. For that, USC was hit with massive NCAA penalties as the NCAA ruled the Trojans showed a lack of institutional control. The most severe and notable punishment for USC was the removal of its 2004 BCS national championship title and Bush's 2005 Heisman Trophy award, which has since been reinstated to the running back. In addition to the vacated wins, USC football suffered a bowl ban in 2010 and 2011. Several other sports programs were affected as well, including basketball for the recruitment of O.J. Mayo. Hugh Freeze recruiting scandal at Ole Miss One of the more severe punishments handed out by the NCAA in college football history recently involved Hugh Freeze during his time at Ole Miss. Freeze's NCAA infractions began on the recruiting trail when the Rebels built four consecutive top-20 recruiting classes over the span of 2013 to 2017. This caught the eyes of the NCAA, which, in January 2016, notified Ole Miss of 13 NCAA violation allegations against the football program. Soon an investigation was started and then expanded when there were findings that former Ole Miss offensive lineman Laremy Tunsil took money from an Ole Miss assistant to pay his rent in Oxford — pay to play. The NCAA's investigation found Freeze's program committed 21 total violations, with 15 of them being Level I infractions, the most serious on the NCAA's scale of violations. Four of the violations found in the larger NCAA investigation were tied to former Rebels coach Houston Nutt. But that isn't the only time Freeze got into trouble with the NCAA during his time in Oxford. During research for a defamation suit against Ole Miss, Nutt's lawyers found through a Freedom of Information Act request of Freeze's phone records that he was using his university-issued cellphone to call at least 12 numbers associated with online advertisements for escort services. Freeze resigned from Ole Miss in 2017. The NCAA slapped Ole Miss with a lengthy list of penalties and punishments: 33 wins vacated from 2010-2016, a two-year postseason ban (2017 and 2018), three years of probation, scholarship reductions and recruiting restrictions. Freeze was hit with a two-game suspension himself, but did not serve it as he sat out the 2018 college football season. Notre Dame vacated wins over academic misconduct In 2016, Notre Dame was ordered by the NCAA to vacate all of its 21 wins from the 2012 and 2013 seasons after it found a former Notre Dame student athletic trainer violated NCAA ethical conduct rules when she committed academic misconduct for two football players and provided six other football players with impermissible academic extra benefits. There was an additional Notre Dame football player who committed unethical academic misconduct on his own. Notre Dame self-reported all the infractions to the NCAA and was praised for its cooperation in the NCAA's investigation. Notre Dame appealed the NCAA's decision but was denied in 2018. As penalties, the former Notre Dame football players — Ishaq Williams, Kendall Moore, Eilar Hardy, Davaris Daniels and KeiVarae Russell — were suspended before the 2014 season for academic misconduct and the trainer received a one-year probation and a two-year show-cause order and disassociation. The university was also slapped with $5,000 fine. Penn State punishment Of the examples mentioned above, the NCAA's punishments to Penn State during the end of the Joe Paterno era in State College were unprecedented, given that the penalties and punishments came from an off-the-field investigation regarding former Nittany Lions assistant coach Jerry Sandusky. In 2011, Sandusky, who had coached at Penn State from 1969-1999, was arrested for serial sexual abuse against children that happened over a 16-year period dating back to 1994. He was convicted of 45 counts of child sexual abuse in 2012. Noted by ESPN, Sandusky's child sexual abuse was brought to light in 2011 when a former Penn State graduate assistant, Mike McQueary, testified by saying that he saw Sandusky with a young boy naked in a team shower on a Friday night a decade earlier and that he then reported it to Paterno, who then reported it to Penn State administrators. The investigation and trial against Sandusky revealed that Paterno and Penn State administrators knew of Sandusky's behavior and did not report it to police. Sandusky's arrest prompted Penn State's board of trustees to fire Paterno after the Hall of Fame coach said he was not going to coach any longer after the season finished. The NCAA hit Penn State with unprecedented sanctions, including a $60 million fine, a four-year postseason football ban, vacating all of Penn State's victories dating back to 1998 — 111 of which were attributed to Paterno — and loss of scholarships. In 2015, the NCAA reinstated Paterno's 111 wins to give him back the status of major college football's all-time winningest coach. Two years prior, the NCAA also reduced Penn State's penalties by gradually restoring scholarships to the Nittany Lions' roster. The Nittany Lions' postseason ban was also lifted in 2014 by the NCAA's Executive Committee.

Carmel teen shooting that left man with serious injuries started as weed pen robbery
Carmel teen shooting that left man with serious injuries started as weed pen robbery

Indianapolis Star

time2 days ago

  • Indianapolis Star

Carmel teen shooting that left man with serious injuries started as weed pen robbery

New details have been released about a Carmel shooting on Aug. 9 leading to the arrest of five teenagers and requiring a man to have extensive surgery. The shooting began as a robbery over marijuana pens, according to newly filed court records. Four teenagers participated in the robbery while another was detained for supplying and storing firearms used in the robbery, according to court records. The man who was shot required extensive surgery as a result of "significant internal trauma" that may have long-term complications, court records said. Bullet fragments remain in his body. A man and his cousin drove to the 1100 block of Golfview Drive of Carmel on Aug. 9 to sell weed pens to someone he met on Snapchat, according to the Carmel Police Departments. The cousin thought the driver was selling shoes because the pens were stored in a shoebox, he told police. When the men arrived, they said they were ambushed by four teenagers with guns. One of the teenagers got into the back of their car and demanded the driver hand over everything he had, court records indicated. The driver refused and was shot. Along with a box of marijuana pens, court records said the teens stole about $1,200 in cash, which they split. As the teens left, one was dropped off at an apartment complex. He told police he had work nearby. The rest of the teens met with another juvenile on their way back to an address in Carmel where two of them lived. That juvenile said he took their guns. He told police he'd stored their friends' firearms at least five other times. During questioning, he also admitted to a robbery during an unrelated drug deal earlier in the year, according to court records. At least one teenager admitted to smoking the weed pens. Below are the Hamilton County Prosecutor's Office's charges against the teenagers. Carmel police initially arrested a 14 year old for dangerous possession of a firearm, it said on Facebook one day after the shooting. It is not immediately clear whether prosecutors formalized the charge due to privacy considerations regarding minors. Juvenile 1 Juvenile 2 Juvenile 3 Juvenile 4 Under Indiana law, teens older than 16 but younger than 18 charged with certain serious crimes are automatically treated as adults in court. Attempted murder and robbery resulting in serious bodily injury are both qualifying crimes. IndyStar uses discretion in naming people accused of crimes, considering the severity of charges and available information, among other factors. Suspects may not be named if ongoing reporting of the associated court proceedings is not immediately planned.

Family of man shot by IMPD in 2023 files lawsuit. Officer has since retired from department
Family of man shot by IMPD in 2023 files lawsuit. Officer has since retired from department

Indianapolis Star

time3 days ago

  • Indianapolis Star

Family of man shot by IMPD in 2023 files lawsuit. Officer has since retired from department

His killing by an Indianapolis Metropolitan Police officer was a heavy topic of community discussion on officer-involved shootings. Two years later, his family has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the officer and the City of Indianapolis. Gary Harrell Sr., 49, was shot in the back and killed by then 28-year veteran IMPD Officer Douglas Correll on Aug. 3, 2023. A critical incident video shows Harrell running from the officer after a traffic stop with a firearm in hand, but he never points it at the officer, prompting community members and his family to question why Douglas would shoot. "We are tired, frustrated, and fed up with all this police brutality against us," Harrell's sister, Melissa "Missy" Williams, said during an October 2023 protest for Harrell. "This was my brother... It could have been one of your loved ones." Harrell's name was shared frequently in 2023 discussions about officer-involved shootings. The next man shot and killed by police that same month prompted a town hall meeting nearly 24 hours later. The Black Church Coalition called Harrell's shooting death an "egregious pattern" by the department, Indianapolis Metropolitan Police told IndyStar that Correll has since retired from the department. Harrell was the oldest of six kids, and in the lawsuit filed by his mother, it's alleged that Correll had previously been accused of using excessive force while working for the department. An 'egregious pattern': Group, family demand transparency after officer shoots, kills man Harrell's estate is seeking compensatory and punitive damages, including all reasonable and necessary medical and hospital, autopsy, and funeral expenses, and the loss of love and companionship from Harrell, along with administrative costs and attorney fees. The lawsuit was filed in July 2025, and the claims being brought forth are wrongful death, common law assault and battery, violation and deprivation of Harrell's civil rights and the Fourth Amendment's unreasonable seizure and excessive force use. Overall, the lawsuit alleges that the City of Indianapolis failed to 'properly monitor the use of excessive, unreasonable and unnecessary force by its officers,' since the city oversees the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department. "Officer Correll's actions during his interaction with Gary Harrell Sr. exhibited reckless and callous indifference to Gary Harrell Sr.'s constitutional rights," the document filed reads. It claims that IMPD tolerates and has failed to properly review, revise, implement, and enforce policies regarding investigations and handling use-of-force situations by officers. IndyStar reached out to the attorney for the lawsuit, who did not respond the time of this article's publication. 'Out of respect for the judicial process, we do not comment on pending litigation,' the department said about the case. In a 2018 lawsuit, Correll was accused of maliciously battering and crushing the spleen of an unarmed, non-resisting young man who had requested the assistance of police after he had been shot by an unknown assailant. Just before 2:15 a.m., on July 2, 2016, Indianapolis Metropolitan Police were called to a duplex in the 3900 block of Hillside Avenue. There, they encountered Joshua Harris, who had thought he'd been shot while outside. A police report for the incident states that Harris had not been shot. "He had, however, been physically assaulted by a suspect he refused to identify and arrested for resisting law enforcement after he physically impeded efforts to continue the investigation," it reads. The police report says that Harris was taken to Eskenazi Hospital for treatment of injuries he received in the initial assault. Harris's lawsuit states that when Correll and another officer arrived, Harris tried to explain what happened and show them his foot. The court document states that Correll walked straight past him and said, "Get the f--- out my face." When officers began to enter his home, Harris told them they didn't have permission. That's when Correll is accused of punching Harris twice in the face, causing him to fall to his knees. While trying to stand up, the lawsuit says Correll grabbed both of Harris's shoulders and kneed him in the abdomen. Harris would later be arrested for resisting law enforcement, but the case would be dismissed. In that case, the City of Indianapolis paid $380,000 to a trust fund for Harris on Dec. 30, 2019.

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