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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Wednesday, June 17, 2009

NBA: Lakers parade on despite frets over cost, crime


By JOHN ROGERS and SOLANGE REYNER
Associated Press Writers

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Los Angeles Lakers' Kobe Bryant waves, while holding his daughter Gianna Maria-Onore, as his wife Vanessa, second from right, and their daughter Natalia Diamante, right, look on during the Lakers NBA basketball world championship parade in Los Angeles,

RICHARD VOGEL | Associated Press

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LOS ANGELES — Tens of thousands of jubilant Los Angeles Lakers fans converged on downtown Wednesday, creating a tidal wave of purple and gold to celebrate the franchise’s 15th NBA title with a parade and rally paid for by the city’s movers and shakers.

The parade began at Staples Center, the home of the team, and headed along a 2›-mile route to the 95,000-seat Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, where a giant rally was planned.
The venue was filled to capacity more than an hour before the parade kicked off.
Police Chief William J. Bratton warned people still headed for the landmark venue to find another place to watch the festivities.
All along the parade route, people were lined up more than a dozen deep under sunny skies to watch Kobe Bryant, coach Phil Jackson and other players from the storied franchise ride by on double-decker buses.
Police reported no arrests before the parade. Looting and vandalism after the team won the title Sunday resulted in 18 arrests.
In the days before the celebration, much was made of its estimated $2 million cost, with critics complaining that a city a half-billion dollars in debt and facing layoffs could not afford the celebration.
But private donors stepped up at the 11th hour and underwrote most of the cost.
Billionaire developers Eli Broad and Ed Roski were among several donors who kicked in $850,000, and the Lakers and AEG, a unit of the Anshutz Co. that owns Staples Center where the team plays, paid $1 million in production costs.
“The city is getting a celebration on the cheap in some respects, and a great celebration,” Bratton said.
Albert de la Cruz arrived at the parade route with his baby in an antique baby carriage decorated with purple and gold suede and covered in Lakers logos.
Not far away, Letitcia Gutierrez was crammed against a chain-link fence separating fans from the parade route. But she didn’t mind the cramped quarters.
“It’s a great thing to be a part of,” she said. “We got passion and motivation. We’re rowdy.”
People began camping out along the route on Tuesday night, with the majority clad in purple and gold jerseys, hats, sweat pants or shorts. Some even dyed their hair purple for the parade.
Some fans waited through the night at the Coliseum. By dawn, so many were spilling into the surrounding streets that the facility’s parking lot was opened to accommodate them.
There was a significant presence of police cars. Bratton said there were at least 1,700 officers on the scene.
The parade was the first such event since the Lakers last won a championship in 2003. Soon after that victory, feuding between Bryant and former Lakers center Shaquille O’Neal led to O’Neal being traded.
With the six-year dry spell that followed ONeal’s trade finally over, those in the crowd Wednesday were already predicting another victory next year, many shouting, “Back to back without Shaq.”
Lakers guard Derek Fisher joined the mayor and police chief ahead of the event in pleading for paradegoers to behave responsibly.
Bratton said plainclothes and uniformed officers were stationed in the crowd.