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RB Maurice Clarett (B1G Freshman of the Year, National Champion)

If your earlier reported theory espoused by someone in the CPD is backed up

This is the most plausible explanation. You don't run around wearing a vest because you like the look and feel, so whatever he was planning was imminent. Not at the WHAC and not at the courhouse in the morning.

The vodka could have been an attempt to get his nerve up.

And he was near the house of a witness when arrested.

Just glad to read that the coach of the Hit Men says this wont affect his status with the team.
 
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I am much more concerned about the reasons why Jarrett was reinstated, without suspension from even one game, at USC.

This guy is into all kinds of people for money. He has all kinds of possible reasons for being in a Columbus neighborhood of someone who was going to testify against him.

None of it looks good and none of it should detract from the #1 team in football.

Clarett may be Tom Friend's career but he isn't news in my life. Lock him up, get him some professional help while he is there.

I'm going to focus on The Ohio State Buckeyes, something Clarett never was in my opinion.
 
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Clarett's troubles are nobody's fault but his own
August 9, 2006
OK, 10 points and a blow pop for the first person who correctly answers what Maurice Clarett was getting ready to do before getting arrested:
A. Rob someone.
B. Go hunting.
C. Get on top of the tallest building in Columbus and go James Cagney on us.
D. All of the above
True story: I'm driving back from taking my kids to school this morning, and this pudding pop host on talk radio says Clarett's troubles are Jim Tressel's fault. Says the university walked away from Clarett instead of standing by him.
Poor Maurice. The university used him to win a national title, then it all unravels.
1. He pouts while the rest of his teammates celebrate at Sun Devil Stadium after winning it all in the Fiesta Bowl.
2. His (loaner) car is vandalized and he files a fraudulent insurance claim.
3. He takes on the NFL in court and has "advisors" tell him he can win when he had a better chance brokering Middle East peace.
4. He says Ohio State committed NCAA violations; none of which were proven.
5. He is drafted by the Denver Broncos, shows up fat and unmotivated and is quickly cut.
6. He pulls a gun on a couple of guys in an alley to steal a cell phone.
7. He hops in his car with four loaded weapons and wears a bullet-proof vest and decides to do a little joy riding.
I can see him now: Top of the world, ma!
 
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DDN

Police: Former OSU star Clarett arrested with 4 guns in SUV

Associated Press
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COLUMBUS, Ohio — Maurice Clarett was charged with carrying a concealed weapon after a highway chase early Wednesday that ended with police using Mace on the former Ohio State running back and finding four loaded guns in his sport utility vehicle, police said.
Officers used Mace to subdue Clarett after a stun gun was ineffective because the former Fiesta Bowl star was wearing a bullet-resistant vest, Sgt. Michael Woods said.
"It took several officers to get him handcuffed," Woods said. "Even after he was placed in the paddy wagon, he was still kicking at the doors and being a problem for the officers."
The complaint police filed when they charged him with carrying a concealed weapon without a permit said he had a 9 mm handgun under his legs in the driver's seat of an SUV.
Police also charged him with failing to maintain a continuous lane, which they said was for Clarett weaving in and out of lanes on a road before he entered the highway. More charges are possible, Woods said.
Clarett, 22, did not speak to police who tried to interview him at the station before he was moved to the Franklin County Jail.
Wearing tan jail-issue clothes, he talked on the telephone in the booking area, separated from reporters by a window. He was to be held at the jail at least until an arraignment Thursday morning, unless his attorneys work out an agreement for his release, police said.
Clarett made an illegal U-turn on the city's east side and failed to stop when officers, in a cruiser with lights flashing, tried to pull him over, Woods said.
Police said they pursued Clarett onto the eastbound lanes of Interstate 70, one of the city's main freeways, when he darted across the median and began heading west. Clarett drove over a spike strip that was placed on the highway, flattening the driver's side tires of the SUV, Woods said. A police helicopter in the area helped track the vehicle.
Clarett exited the highway and pulled into a restaurant parking lot about 10 minutes after police say they saw him make the U-turn. Officers removed him from the SUV after he failed to obey numerous orders to exit the vehicle, Woods said.
After Clarett was placed in a police van, officers discovered a loaded assault rifle on the passenger seat and three handguns in the front of the car, including one in a holster in a backpack on the passenger-side floor, Woods said.
"We don't have any idea why he had them or what, if anything, he was going to do with them," Woods said. Police don't know where Clarett got the guns or where he was headed or coming from in the SUV. Federal authorities plan to trace the guns' ownership.
A half-full bottle of vodka was found in the SUV, but no breath test was administered because police had no indication that Clarett was intoxicated, Woods said.
Police also found a compact disc of children's songs recorded by Ohio prison inmates that the state distributed last month to prisoners and their families.
Clarett is currently awaiting trial on two counts of aggravated robbery, four counts of robbery and one count of carrying a concealed weapon in a separate case. Authorities said he was identified by witnesses as the person who flashed a gun and robbed two people of a cell phone in an alley behind the Opium Lounge in Columbus in the early hours of Jan. 1.
One of the Clarett's attorneys in that case, Nick Mango, said he was going to the jail to see Clarett to "make sure he's OK emotionally and mentally." Clarett has not asked Mango to represent him on the new charges.
"I'm shocked as everyone else is about the allegation," Mango said. "Obviously, he's a young man with a lot of weight on his shoulders."
The home address Clarett gave police was his mother's house in Youngstown. A message seeking comment was left at the home.
Clarett scored the winning touchdown in the second overtime of the Fiesta Bowl against Miami to lead Ohio State to the 2002 national championship, the school's first since 1968. But that was the last game the freshman played for Ohio State.
He sat out the 2003 season after being charged with misdemeanor falsification on a police report, then dropped out of school. He sued to be included in the 2004 NFL draft and lost in court.
A surprise third-round pick in the 2005 draft, he was cut by the Denver Broncos during the preseason.
Clarett plans to play for the Mahoning Valley Hitmen, one of five teams in the Eastern Indoor Football League. The team, based in Clarett's hometown of Youngstown, is to begin play in January.
Hitmen coach and owner Jim Terry said that there was no indication that anything was wrong when he spoke with Clarett by cell phone early Wednesday morning about the team's upcoming tryouts. The call was dropped around 1 a.m. and Terry missed Clarett's second call about an hour and a half later, which would have been near the time when police say they saw Clarett make a U-turn.
The arrest will not affect Clarett's status with the team, Terry said.
"We gave him a chance and now we'll wait to see what happens," he said. "I've seen far worse situations than this."
Clarett has not signed a contract with the team yet, pending a fire marshal's inspection of the team's home field. Clarett's proposed contract includes attendance incentives that cannot be finalized until the fire marshal determines the capacity of the team's arena.
Associated Press reporter JoAnne Viviano contributed to this story.



DDN

atest troubles not a surprise, just sad

By Sean McClelland
Staff Writer
In the movie A Bronx Tale, Robert DeNiro tells his son, "The saddest thing in life is wasted talent."


Whenever Maurice Clarett pops up in the news lately, that's what goes through my mind.
So, which part of the latest Clarett incident surprises you?
That he was pursued by the cops in his SUV?
That he was traveling with four loaded guns and some Vodka?
That efforts to subdue him with a stun gun failed because he was wearing a bullet-proof vest?
That mace was required?
Granted, the bullet-proof vest is a new twist, but Clarett's troubles are blurring now to the point where you can't separate them anymore. He's robbing this guy, fleeing from that guy. Guns are involved. He's become a walking miniseries.
And in the tradition of Dwight Gooden, Mike Tyson, Darryl Strawberry and other such miscreants, it would seem the only thing left to complete this tragic fall from grace is a lengthy stint behind bars.
Such an instinctive football player when leading Ohio State to the national championship, Clarett has become the poster child for making the wrong choice again and again.
It's a shame because, in the long run, Clarett did more good than harm at OSU in his brief stay.
Don't kid yourself. Without him, the gap today between national titles would be 38 years and counting.
The images live in your mind. Of Clarett scoring the winning TD against Miami in the championship game.
Of Clarett stealing the ball from safety Sean Taylor, ripping it from his grasp at a critical moment.
But they fade with each passing arrest, and in light of whatever real or imagined fear led him to add Kevlar to his wardrobe, maybe the only real surprise today is that Maurice Clarett is still alive.


PHOTOS



DDN

Latest trouble means Clarett could spend trial in jail cell

Associated Press
COLUMBUS — The legal morass that has ensnared Maurice Clarett since he was Ohio State's star running back mounted Wednesday when police found four loaded guns in his sport utility vehicle and couldn't subdue him with a stun gun because he was wearing a bullet-proof vest.


What kind of mess is Clarett in?
Clarett hid one semiautomatic handgun under his legs in the driver's seat and had an AK-47-type assault rifle on the passenger seat, police said. They said they found two other semiautomatic handguns, including one in a holster in a backpack.
"We don't have any idea why he had them or what, if anything, he was going to do with them," Columbus police Sgt. Michael Woods said. "But if you've got four guns in your car, you're up to no good."
Police said the 6-foot, 245-pound Clarett refused to get out of the SUV when he pulled into a restaurant parking lot after a highway chase. It took several officers to handcuff him, and he kicked the doors of a transport vehicle as he was being taken to city police headquarters, Woods said.
An open bottle of vodka was found in the SUV, but no breath test was given because there was no indication Clarett was intoxicated, Woods said.
A tough year
Earlier this year, he was charged with robbery and carrying a concealed weapon after authorities say he was identified by witnesses as the person who flashed a gun and robbed two people in an alley behind a Columbus lounge early on New Year's morning.
The 22-year-old Clarett became a father when his girlfriend gave birth to a premature daughter last month. When a judge scolded Clarett last week for being late for a hearing on the robbery charges, his attorney said Clarett was taking care of the baby.
Clarett vs. Franklin County
Assistant Franklin County Prosecutor Tim Mitchell asked a judge Wednesday to keep Clarett in jail and revoke his bond on the robbery charges, given that Clarett was arrested close to the home of Tywona Douglas, one of the people who identified him in the alley.
Clarett's attorney, Nick Mango, said it was "probably unlikely" that Clarett would be able to post the higher bond, meaning he would stay in jail for the duration of a trial that starts Monday.
Sympathy for Clarett
News of his arrest troubled former Ohio State teammate Tyler Everett, who's been friends with Clarett since both were 12. Everett, a rookie safety in camp with the Broncos, said that didn't sound like the Clarett he knows.
"For him to carry guns and do stuff like that, there has to be more to the story," Everett said. "He's a good guy who's had bad guidance, and listens sometimes to the wrong people."


ABJ

CHARGES AGAINST CLARETT

Police have charged Maurice Clarett with:
• Carrying a concealed weapon.
• Weaving in and out of lanes and making an illegal U-turn on a freeway.
Police allege Clarett:
• Was wearing a bullet-resistant vest.
• Had a 9 mm handgun under his legs in the driver's seat of an SUV.
• Had three other loaded weapons in the SUV.
• Made an illegal U-turn on a Columbus freeway and failed to stop for officers.
• Ignored numerous orders to exit the vehicle.
Clarett already is awaiting trial on:
• Two counts of aggravated robbery, four counts of robbery and one count of carrying a concealed weapon in a separate case.


CPD Coverage
 
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8/10/06

Broncos lament downfall of ‘nice kid’ Clarett

By Pat Graham

Associated Press

CLARETT2_08-10-2006_VT7G5D3.jpg

Associated Press
The inside of Maurice Clarett’s SUV shows some of the firearms in his possession when he was arrested early Wednesday.

DENVER – Broncos safety Nick Ferguson tried to reach out to Maurice Clarett during last year’s training camp, but the former Ohio State running back turned a cold shoulder.
Clarett, taken in the third round of the 2005 draft, wouldn’t let any of his teammates get to know him. That’s one of the reasons the Broncos cut Clarett before he even played a down in the NFL.
“He was pretty withdrawn, which is really hard to be being around guys like this in the organization,” Ferguson said. “If you can’t gel with guys on this team, there’s a problem.”
Upon hearing the news of Clarett’s latest brush with authorities – he was charged with carrying a concealed weapon after a highway chase early Wednesday – safety John Lynch couldn’t help but feel saddened for the former Buckeyes star.
“It’s a shame,” Lynch said. “You don’t like to see that with anybody. We spent a short time around here and everyone wants to talk about what went wrong, but the kid was a nice kid. I wish him the best.”
Clarett injured his groin early in training camp last year and never got a chance to show the form that helped lead the Buckeyes to a national championship at the end of the 2002 season. Clarett’s reluctance to associate with teammates was a factor when Denver coach Mike Shanahan decided not to keep him around on injured reserve or the practice squad.
“We tried to reach (out to) him quite a bit when he was here,” Shanahan said. “What he did have here was a lot of support from our veterans. Our players really tried to take care of this guy, and he wanted no part of it. That’s one of the reasons why he didn’t make our football team.”
When asked if more could’ve been done to help out the troubled running back, Shanahan shook his head.
“I don’t think I’ve ever been around a bunch of guys reaching out to a guy more than Maurice, trying to help him and a guy not wanting that help,” Shanahan said. “That’s a shame.
“It’s just a shame that this has happened to a guy that (had) so much promise, so much ability. I’m not sure what happened, but it’s a real shame.”
After Clarett was taken into custody by police in Columbus, Ohio, officers found guns in his sport utility vehicle. He was also wearing a bullet-proof vest.
News of his arrest troubled former Ohio State teammate Tyler Everett, who’s been friends with Clarett since they were 12. Everett, a rookie safety trying to earn a spot with Denver, said that didn’t sound like the Clarett he knows.
“For him to carry guns and do stuff like that, there has to be more to the story,” Everett said. “He’s a good guy who’s had bad guidance and listens sometimes to the wrong people.”
Clarett is awaiting trial on two counts of aggravated robbery, four counts of robbery and one count of carrying a concealed weapon in a separate incident Jan. 1. Authorities said he flashed a gun and robbed two people of a cell phone in an alley in Columbus.
Everett is expecting to hear from Clarett, who always calls when he gets into trouble.
“I’ll be here to talk to him, give him some advice,” Everett said.
Clarett’s former teammates are still rooting for him to get his life straightened out.
“Of course you’ve got to feel sorry for anybody in that state,” Ferguson said. “I hope someone gets him help.
“I’d hate to see the young man’s life have a turn for the worse.”

Link

8/10/06

Clarett kept distance from Broncos
The Associated Press

DENVER — Denver Broncos safety Nick Ferguson tried to reach out to Maurice Clarett during last year's training camp, but the former Ohio State running back turned a cold shoulder.
Clarett, taken in the third round of the 2005 draft, wouldn't let any of his teammates get to know him. That's one of the reasons the Broncos cut Clarett before he even played a down in the NFL.
"He was pretty withdrawn, which is really hard to be being around guys like this in the organization," Ferguson said. "If you can't gel with guys on this team, there's a problem."
Upon hearing the news of Clarett's latest brush with authorities - he was charged with carrying a concealed weapon after a highway chase early Wednesday - safety John Lynch couldn't help but feel saddened.
"It's a shame," Lynch said. "You don't like to see that with anybody. We spent a short time around here and everyone wants to talk about what went wrong, but the kid was a nice kid. I wish him the best."
Clarett injured his groin early in training camp last year and never got a chance to show the form that helped lead the Buckeyes to a national championship at the end of the 2002 season. Clarett's reluctance to associate with teammates was a factor when Denver coach Mike Shanahan decided not to keep him around on injured reserve or the practice squad.
"We tried to reach (out to) him quite a bit when he was here," Shanahan said. "What he did have here was a lot of support from our veterans. Our players really tried to take care of this guy and he wanted no part of it. That's one of the reasons why he didn't make our football team."
When asked if more could've been done to help out the troubled running back, Shanahan shook his head.
"I don't think I've ever been around a bunch of guys reaching out to a guy more than Maurice, trying to help him and a guy not wanting that help," Shanahan said. "That's a shame.
"It's just a shame that this has happened to a guy that (had) so much promise, so much ability. I'm not sure what happened, but it's a real shame."
 
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Clarett's rise and fall
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Events surrounding former Ohio State running back Maurice Clarett:
Aug. 20, 2002 - Clarett, a freshman, is listed as OSU's starting running back.
October 2002 - Clarett says he received hate mail from Ohio State fans after an ESPN The Magazine article quoted him as saying he had thought about leaving college early for the NFL.

December 2002 - Blasts Ohio State officials for not allowing him to fly home from Arizona, where the Buckeyes were preparing for their national-title matchup against Miami, for the funeral of a friend. Accuses administrators of lying when they say he didn't file necessary paperwork for emergency financial aid for the flight.
Jan. 3, 2003 - Scores on a 5-yard run, the winning score in a 31-24 double-overtime victory over Miami to give Ohio State its first national title in 34 years.
July 12, 2003 - The New York Times quotes an OSU teaching assistant who says Clarett got preferential treatment.
July 29, 2003 - Ohio State confirms the NCAA is investigating Clarett's claim that clothing, CDs, cash and stereo equipment worth more than $10,000 were stolen in April from a car he borrowed from a local dealership.
Sept. 9, 2003 - Clarett charged with misdemeanor falsification for the police report on the theft.
Sept. 10, 2003 - Athletic director Andy Geiger announces Clarett is suspended for the season for receiving special benefits worth thousands of dollars from a family friend and repeatedly misleading investigators.
Sept. 23, 2003 - Clarett sues the NFL, challenging the rule that a player must be out of high school three years to be eligible for the league's draft.
Dec. 17, 2003 - An Ohio State committee finds no evidence to support allegations of academic misconduct by athletes, including Clarett.
Jan. 14, 2004 - Clarett pleads guilty to failure to aid a law enforcement officer, a lesser charge than lying on a police report, and is fined $100.
May 24, 2004 - After months of legal wrangling, the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rules against Clarett's bid to be declared eligible for the NFL draft, meaning he will have to wait for the 2005 draft.
Nov. 9, 2004 - Clarett alleges in ESPN The Magazine that Jim Tressel or his staff arranged for him to get passing grades, cars and money for bogus summer jobs. Geiger denies the claims.
April 4, 2005 - The Supreme Court declines to hear Clarett's NFL appeal.
April 23, 2005 - Clarett is chosen in the third round of the NFL draft by the Denver Broncos.
Aug. 28, 2005 - Broncos cut Clarett.
Jan. 1, 2006 - Clarett is accused of robbing two people at gunpoint in an alley behind a Columbus bar.
Aug. 9 - Clarett is arrested after a highway chase that police say started when he refused to pull over after a traffic violation. Police say they used pepper spray on him and found three handguns and an AK-47 assault rifle inside the vehicle he was driving.
 
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According to USA Today, he was only a few blocks from one of the witnesses' homes.

Former Ohio State star Clarett arrested with 4 guns in SUV near witness' home
Updated 8/10/2006 3:13 AM ET

2006-08-09-clarett2.jpg


COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — When police ran into Maurice Clarett this time, officers said he was driving erratically and carrying an arsenal that included three semi-automatic handguns and an AK-47-type assault rifle in the front seat — all loaded.

A highway chase ensued, then ended in the early hours Wednesday when police spiked the former Ohio State star running back's tires. Even then, officers said they could not easily subdue him because the bullet-proof vest he was wearing thwarted their stun guns.

It took several police and pepper spray to get the 6-foot, 245-pounder into handcuffs. The struggle continued as he kicked at the doors of the transport vehicle that took him away.

But Clarett's latest bizarre run-in with the law took perhaps its most troubling turn hours later, when prosecutors asked a judge to keep him in jail and revoke his bond on an earlier robbery charge.

One reason: He was driving a few blocks from the home of a woman who was set to testify against him next week, Franklin County Prosecutor Ron O'Brien said.

The judge raised the bond to $1.1 million. Clarett's attorney, Nick Mango, said it was "probably unlikely" that Clarett would be able to post it, meaning he would stay in jail for the duration of his trial, which starts Monday.


Clarett was charged with carrying a concealed weapon, a felony, and given a traffic citation, and police said more charges are possible. An arraignment was scheduled for Thursday morning.

Sgt. Michael Woods said Clarett wove in and out of lanes, did a U-turn on a freeway and refused to leave the SUV after a spike stick flattened its tires. The 22-year-old Clarett had a semiautomatic handgun under his legs on the driver's seat, police said, and an assault rifle on the passenger seat. Two other semiautomatic handguns were in the vehicle, including one in a holster in a backpack.

"We don't have any idea why he had them or what, if anything, he was going to do with them," Woods said. "But if you've got four guns in your car you're up to no good."

Officers said they also found a partially full bottle of vodka following the arrest, but no breath test was given because there was no indication he was intoxicated, Woods said. On the console, a police photo shows, was a compact disc of children's songs recorded by prison inmates.

Clarett's promising football career was derailed when he was suspended for the 2003 season after being charged with falsifying a police report.

He dropped out of school, then sued and lost in an attempt to be included in the 2004 NFL draft, a challenge that went to the Supreme Court. He was a surprise third-round pick by the Denver Broncos in the 2005 draft but was cut during the preseason.

Earlier this year, he was charged with robbery and carrying a concealed weapon after authorities say he was identified as the person who flashed a gun and robbed two people of a cellphone behind a Columbus lounge early on New Year's morning.

Assistant Franklin County Prosecutor Tim Mitchell asked a judge Wednesday to keep Clarett in jail and revoke his bond on the robbery charges, given that Clarett was arrested close to the home of Tywona Douglas, one of the people who identified him in that alley.

Police said they don't know where the guns came from or where Clarett was headed or coming from in the SUV, which was registered to a relative of Clarett's in Youngstown. Mango, whom Clarett had not hired to represent him in the new criminal case, said he is concerned about Clarett's mental health.

"He's been under a lot of pressure because of this case," he said, referring to the robbery charge.

Clarett, a high school friend of NBA star LeBron James, became a father when his girlfriend gave birth to a premature daughter last month. When a judge scolded Clarett last week for being late for a hearing on the robbery charges, his attorney said Clarett was taking care of the baby.

Clarett did not speak to police who tried to interview him at the station Wednesday, and his arraignment in that case was scheduled for Thursday.

Clarett had planned to play for the Youngstown-based Mahoning Valley Hitmen, one of five teams in the Eastern Indoor Football League, starting in January. Hitmen coach and owner Jim Terry said he spoke with Clarett by cellphone early Wednesday about upcoming tryouts and there was no hint anything was wrong.

The arrest will not affect Clarett's status with the team, Terry said.

"We gave him a chance and now we'll wait to see what happens," he said. "I've seen far worse situations than this."

As a freshman, Clarett scored the winning touchdown in the second overtime of the Fiesta Bowl against Miami to lead Ohio State to the 2002 national championship, the school's first since 1968. It was the last game he played for the Buckeyes.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Posted 8/9/2006 6:26 AM ET
 
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I'm going to focus on The Ohio State Buckeyes, something Clarett never was in my opinion.

Ironically I had been rewatching the 2003 Fiesta Bowl in the days before this broke.

Reconciling my feelings towards that game and my feelings towards the subsequent MoC saga will always be a dilemma. We don't have 5 NCs without MoC.
 
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Nothing the least bit funny about the Clarett story, regardless of your opinions about the young man.

To each his own I guess. As long as he doesn't hurt anybody else, I'm hoping for a couple of more arrests down the road. It'll be tough to top the laughter index of this latest arrest, but I hope Clarett has it in him.
Personally, I'm hoping for a "Falling Down" style meltdown.
 
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Oh8ch said:
My brother just called with the straight scope relayed from a caller on 610 radio.

MC was originally supposed to go to ND because of influence from the mob. He backed out and went to OSU instead. This cost the mob a bunch of money, which he never repaid.

On the eve of the Fiesta Bowl the mob killed one of his friends to send him a message. MC has been carrying a gun ever since.

Now I will admit, this sounds a bit far fetched at first. But when you think it over, he did lose a friend to a violent death on the eve of the Fiesta and ND does have a football team. So it must be true.
Yes, his friend did die, but Notre Ame has a football team? You expect me to believe that?
 
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