|
IU,
Maryland fans storm streets
By KIMBERLY HEFLING
Associated Press
BLOOMINGTON,
Ind. Basketball fans upset by Indianas loss in the
NCAA championship torched couches, toppled street signs and threw
beer bottles at officers, while Maryland fans set bonfires and shot
off fireworks in celebration.
Bloomington
officers broke up the crowd with tear gas, sending hundreds of students
and fans from an intersection near the edge of the Indiana University
campus at about 1:30 a.m. Tuesday.
About
30 people were arrested on charges including public intoxication,
criminal mischief and disorderly conduct, police said. Four others
were charged with battery on a police officer.
When
students started getting pelted with bottles thats when we
decided to move and disperse the crowd, Bloomington Police
Capt. Mike Deikhoff said. If the crowd hadnt started
throwing beer bottles and setting fires we wouldnt have had
to act.
The
violence came after some students and fans turned bitter following
Indianas 64-52 loss to Maryland late Monday.
Nearly
200 fans greeted the baggy-eyed Hoosiers as they arrived from Atlanta
after Monday to the Terrapins. Most held signs thanking the team
for the surprising string of upsets that ended at the NCAA championship
game.
I
think we brought back the IU tradition the way its supposed
to be, said Dane Fife, the other senior. This put a
smile on our faces like we put the smile back on yours.
In
Maryland, police on horseback pushed thousands of revelers off the
streets early Tuesday, trying to rein in a victory celebration by
fans ecstatic over the schools first national basketball championship.
A total of 15 people were arrested by university and Prince George
County police, with charges ranging from aggravated assault to disorderly
conduct, an official said.
This
is terrible. Weve finally started to lose the reputation as
the Len Bias death school, and now were known as the riot
school, said student Josh Fingold, 21, referring to the 1986
cocaine overdose death of the Maryland basketball star.
Despite
the victory and an increased police presence, the Maryland crowd
turned riotous, breaking the window of bicycle shop, throwing bottles
and other objects at police and lighting bonfires.
Several
officers suffered minor injuries when they were struck by bottles
and other objects, said state police Lt. Bud Frank.
In
Bloomington, about 40 people were treated for injuries including
burns, cuts and too much alcohol, a Bloomington Hospital official
said. Flying debris caused head cuts for two state troopers, who
required stitches, and minor injuries to 21 Bloomington officers,
officials said.
Police
shut down intersections in downtown Bloomington about 11:15 p.m.,
before fans spilled out of bars, houses and dorms to share their
disappointment.
Minutes
later, vandalism reports began pouring in, starting with a trash
fire near an apartment complex and students setting fire to couches,
trash bins and others items. Street signs were torn down and post
office deposit boxes were toppled. By 2:30 a.m., most of the crowd
had dispersed.
The
damage in Maryland did not appear to be as bad as after last years
Final Four loss to Duke when one bonfire caused an estimated $500,000
in damage and disrupted cable service when it burned through a fiber
optic line.
Maj.
Jeff Cox, head of the Prince Georges County police departments
patrol unit, said most of the revelers did not cause trouble, blaming
a few rogues.
I
wish I knew why we keep having this problem. Im hoping tonight
we found the formula for taking care of it, Cox said.
|