Bedford severs ties to Shaquille O’Neal

Bedford severs ties to Shaquille O’Neal

Submitted photo

From left, Rep. Bob Goodlatte of Roanoke, Shaquille O’Neal, and Bedford County Sheriff Mike Brown in Washington, D.C., at the 2005 rollout of the basketball star as national spokesman for the Bedford-based Safe Surfin’ Foundation.
(The photo came from safesurfincentral.com and was published in the N&A on March 24, 2005.)

Advertisement

Text size: small | medium | large

By Carrie J. Sidener

Published: June 25, 2008

A rap performance at a New York City nightclub officially ended Shaquille O’Neal’s association with the Bedford County Sheriff’s Office and Operation Blue Ridge Thunder.

The association was severed when video surfaced of the Phoenix Suns star rapping about his former teammate, Kobe Bryant, on the celebrity news and gossip Web site TMZ.com.

In the song, O’Neal blames Bryant for ruining his marriage and uses racial slurs and other vulgarities.  O’Neal and Bryant played together on the Los Angeles Lakers, and won three straight NBA titles from 2000-2002.

“As a result of this event in New York, which (was) unacceptable, his unofficial association with the Bedford County Sheriff’s Office is suspended,” Brown said in a news release. “His likeness, which is used by Blue Ridge Thunder, will be removed from our Web page and other documents.”

Brown said O’Neal is no longer associated with either entity.

“He made a mistake and he knows it,” Brown said in an interview Wednesday afternoon. “We can’t uphold those comments. They were unacceptable.”

The song also lost O’Neal his association with Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio, according to the Associated Press. Arpaio made O’Neal a special deputy in 2006.

“I want his two badges back,” Arpaio told the Associated Press on Tuesday. “Because if any one of my deputies did something like this, they’re fired.”

O’Neal told ESPN.com on Monday, “I was freestyling. That’s all. It was all done in fun. Nothing serious whatsoever.”

O’Neal still retains his full-time reserve officer status with the Tempe (Arizona) Police Department.

He was sworn in as a Bedford County reserve deputy in 2005. That affiliation ended in January when he was not reappointed. Brown said that was not the result of any action by O’Neal, but rather because of the NBA star’s busy schedule.

With each sheriff’s election, all the deputies have to be reappointed and O’Neal could not make it to Bedford for the ceremony.

Equipment, including a Bedford County sheriff’s badge, was returned to the sheriff’s office earlier this year, Brown said. O’Neal does still have a badge showing his association with the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force that will be returned, Brown said.

“I hope that people remember the great things he did for the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force here and across the country,” Brown said. “He’s done several public service announcements that have been shipped to task forces across the country. Kids watch these PSAs and parents do, too.”

Because of O’Neal’s affiliation, Brown said the task force has been able to attract other celebrity sponsors like Erik Estrada and Miss America Lauren Nelson, and is in talks with several high-profile NASCAR drivers.

“Shaq drew a lot of attention to the task force across the country,” Brown said.

Brown spent more than $11,000 on trips to woo the NBA star to become a national spokesman for the Bedford-based Safe Surfing Foundation. During a three-day visit in 2005 to Bedford, Lynchburg and Roanoke, $3,000 was spent on the star. Thousands more were spent filming public service announcements with O’Neal.

Federal money provided to the Southern Virginia Internet Crime Against Children Task Force by the U.S. Department of Justice paid for those expenses.

In 2006, O’Neal took part in serving a search warrant for child pornography at the wrong house after an Internet service provider provided an incorrect address to deputies. One of 10 law officers serving the warrant, O’Neal also helped search the Gretna house.

In O’Neal’s biography on NBA.com, he said he wants to be a sheriff or police chief when he retires from playing. He’s worked with the Los Angeles Police Department and the Miami Beach Police Department during the off-seasons. He has also attended the Los Angeles County Police Academy.

He received an honorary deputy U.S. Marshal badge in 2005 and became the national spokesman for the Safe Surfin’ Foundation, which is the educational section of the internet crimes unit of the Bedford County Sheriff’s Office and Operation Blue Ridge Thunder.

The video was posted on TMZ.com. In the song, O’Neal raps that “Kobe couldn’t do without me,“ in reference to the Lakers’ player’s inability to win a championship without O’Neal.

Warning: explicit and offensive lyrics

http://youtube.com/watch?v=_a5k4HfHij0

Reader Reactions

Posted by ( lbc4life ) on July 01, 2008 at 12:40 pm

I think Bedford could probably have found a better way to spend the $11,000 they spent “wooing” Shaq in the first place. I bet $11,000 would have gone a long way in the budget of many an after-school program or public library - both effective ways to keep kids supervised during the hours when they’re most likely to be alone with computers.

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( patricemrucker ) on June 28, 2008 at 7:33 pm

Ok do you actual think Shaq gives a heck,  no! If he want to he can buy Bedford… Then what…. Every one wants to get up on the ego trip “He’s a role model” Tell me what you consider a roll model? Oh I got one “Marlyin Manson”, Someone has to blame somebody for there mess up. There’s no such thing as role models your not GOD!....These small town tries to blame someone…. Wake up this is 2008! sh… happens and you can’t do nothing about it but complain. Then who is listening, What’s going to happen when gangs start taking over, People start robbing worse than they are now, What Shaq did was on his time not Bedford time….I look at the Newspaper on line everyday…I just laugh at what people be saying. I live her in North Carolina (Orignal from Lynchburg) and you all be arguing over pitty things. Here the gangs are crazy police officer are too scared to approach them, kids are not safe because they are trying to recurit them at the age of 9 again Bedford mad because Shaq rapped about a song.

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( kwcampbell ) on June 27, 2008 at 8:40 pm

Its always about racism isn’t it? The guy is black and they made him a deputy and he has zero training and no dedication or formal commitment to the job. And somehow Bedford county is racist? Give it a rest already! I guarantee that the “wrong” house they went to was occupied by whites, otherwise they’d be screaming that it was no mistake.. it was just racism.

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( Ms.Cleo ) on June 26, 2008 at 10:08 am

I’m sure Shaq is distraught. Why being “fired” from the Bedford Co, sheriff’‘ department has to be might costly. Amazingly it is disgraceful for Shaq to humor himself and others with a little free style yet it is perfectly acceptable for the “real” sheriffs in Bedford to treat non-whites as second class citizens. Get over it. Perhaps his next free style rap will be about how much bull this country is involved in and some other real issues such as racism!!

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( amy ) on June 25, 2008 at 8:59 pm

Are we sure it isn’t the other way around w/O’Neal severing ties? I mean, it was a joke when he was here and they raided the wrong house!!!

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( Alan ) on June 25, 2008 at 7:07 pm

Its about time! While I salute Blue Ridge Thunder for getting low life slugs off the street I fail to see the logic in having used O’Neal, an untrained individual in actual raids just to get headlines. They even used O’Neal when they raided the wrong home based only on a wrong IP address. It seemed getting the headlines when O’Neal was available was more important than checking the facts and getting the correct address. Yes folks this did happen and it could have been you!

Report Inappropriate Comment

Posted by ( The Arbiter ) on June 25, 2008 at 5:57 pm

Well, when you try to pump up your street cred by having celebrity deputies, you get this kinda thing. These people are not trained, they are playing another roll. They have not been through 22 or so weeks of basic training, aka, the Academy. They have not ridden with a training officer. They do not have the dedication to the job and what it means to be a Law Enforcement Officer.  To them it is a cool thing…something to show the people back home, when the Cristal is flowing, and the homeys are hanging, you can whip out your badge and say “Hey look y’all…check this”

Yeah Shaq, check that!

Report Inappropriate Comment

Post a Comment

The commenting period has ended or commenting has been deactivated for this article.


Tags relating to this article:

Can't find what you're looking for? Try our quick search:



Email This Print This AddThis Social Bookmark Button RSS Feed Add to My Yahoo!

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement