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Monday, December 1, 2014

Rams, police differ on apology story for players' Ferguson protest - USA TODAY






Video Keywords National Football League Saint Louis professional sports



After five Rams players' "hands up don't shoot" gesture sparked controversy among the St. Louis law enforcement community, Rams coach Jeff Fisher said the players were practicing their freedom of speech. VPC



Video Transcript

Automatically Generated Transcript (may not be 100% accurate)



00:01 We did not hear an apology those five players walking
00:05 out onto the field test. Popular and gesture. Now despite the
00:12 heavy criticism of the players they spokesperson for the Saint Louis
00:16 police officers association. Net and that our brains representative and chief
00:21 ducks in this afternoon to discuss concerns. We talked to him
00:25 before that meeting. As far as the choice to play personally
00:30 know they're exercising their right to free speech. The club nor
00:33 will it be disciplined by the National Football League is does
00:36 it was released today. So that's almost sort of talk about
00:41 football and. This is us the professional sports league that that
00:46 penalize isn't finds players for engaging in. Then on field antics
00:50 like spiking the football or dancing in the end zone. There's
00:55 there are behaviors are OK for on the field behaviors that
00:59 are hard and from the law enforcement family's perspective. The behaviors
01:04 we saw yesterday. Are not constructive and and don't belong field.
01:09 Meanwhile we're told both sides will continue their conversation however they
01:13 aren't telling us exactly what happened. And sign that private meeting.






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St. Louis County police and the Rams are at odds Monday night over whether a team official apologized for the "hands up-don't shoot" gesture performed by five players before Sunday's game.


Neither law enforcement officials nor Kevin Demoff, the Rams' executive vice president and chief operations officer, dispute that Demoff reached out to St. Louis area police officials on Monday, a day after five Rams players made the famous gesture during pregame introductions. The content of those conversations, and the semantics of Demoff's words, are up for debate.


Demoff told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that he did not apologize for the players' actions, but that he "regretted any offense their officers may have taken."


"We do believe it is possible to both support our players' First Amendment rights and support the efforts of local law enforcement as our community begins to heal," Demoff told the paper late Monday.







In an email to USA TODAY Sports on Monday night, St. Louis County police spokesman Brian Schellman said Chief Jon Belmar "believed it to be an apology."


"[Demoff] further stated 'I regretted any offense the officer's may have taken.' Even though Mr. Demoff stated he never apologized, the Chief believed it to be an apology and the Chief sent the email to police staff to let them know about the call, after he told Mr. Demoff he would share his sentiments with his staff," Schellman said.


Indeed, Belmar followed up that call by writing a memo to his staff. In that memo, obtained by the Post-Dispatch, the chief told officers that Demoff "regretted that any members of the [Rams'] organization would act in a way that minimized the outstanding work that police officers and departments carry out each and every day."


Earlier Monday, Rams head coach Jeff Fisher said none of the five players would be punished the team for their hand's up pose made before Sunday's game against Oakland, nor will they face any sort of discipline from the NFL.


Fisher, who declined to answer questions about the demonstration, described the pregame gesture as a "choice to exercise their free speech." He had not spoken to the five players about it by Monday evening, but he said he planned to.


"Those conversations will most likely remain confidential," Fisher said.


The St. Louis Police Officers' Association on Sunday night wrote a letter condemning the pose in light of a grand jury's decision last week not to indict Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson in the fatal shooting of African-American teenager Michael Brown.


The police officers' association called the players' actions "tasteless, offensive and inflammatory."


Several of the Rams players spoke to reporters after the Rams' win Sunday evening, and said they were trying to do something positive.


"Violence should stop. There's a lot of violence going on here in St. Louis. We definitely hear about it all, and we just want it to stop," said receiver Stedman Bailey.


None of the five players who participated were available for interviews on Monday.


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