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<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9301090578
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
930310
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, March 10, 1993
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1D
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1993, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
ROSE'S 'FRIENDS' DIDN'T DO HIM ANY FAVORS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Maybe you are lucky enough not to live in the low end of the city, and so
the idea of being some place where drugs are used, or sold, or both, still
seems shocking. It isn't. It happens all the  time in Detroit.  So it is
really no jolt that Jalen Rose, a city kid, a Detroit kid, was in a house
where drugs were found last October. This does not make him an addict. Or a
user. Or a dealer. He is none of those things. He is a city kid who has
friends, old friends, from way before he wore that maize and blue uniform, and
some of those friends are involved with drugs. Maybe Jalen should lose  these
guys. But you can't tell him that, and you can't make him.

  "My boys back home will always be my true friends," Rose says. So there he
was, with some of his true friends, in that house on Cloverlawn  Avenue, on
Oct. 4, and the police break in with a warrant and they find lots of marijuana
and one guy with cocaine and some kids hanging around. And they find Jalen
Rose, Michigan basketball star, playing  video games on the TV set. They write
him a ticket. Loitering. Nothing comes of it.

  The story surfaces five months later, and 26 reporters show up Tuesday on
Michigan's campus. A crowd of photographers chases Rose from his car like he
was Dillinger. They snap. They click. Everyone gets very excited.
  But they are chasing the wrong story.
  The real story isn't Jalen's bad choice in video game locations or his
mini-press conference, in which he apologized "to my teammates and family."
The real story isn't Steve Fisher's rather soft attempts at damage control,
which amount mostly to him saying  Jalen is "a good kid, a quality kid."
  Nuh-uh. The real story here is that the ticket that was issued to Rose
somehow disappeared. Vanished. And no one said anything?
  Tom Moss, a civilian deputy  chief in the Detroit police department,
"assured us that the matter was handled within standard procedures," said Jack
Weidenbach, the Michigan athletic director.
  Standard procedure? The ticket disappears?  Whoa. I want this guy Moss next
time I get tagged for speeding.
No ticket, no justice 
  Tickets don't just disappear, not for loitering in a place where drug
deals are suspected, a misdemeanor punishable  by up to $500 and 90 days in
jail. Did the tickets disappear for the others who were bopped that day? No.
Two of them got the same charge as Rose. And you can bet they'll have to go to
court, maybe see  a judge. Rose? Someone says "don't worry," and he goes back
to jump shooting.
  This is the real crime. Someone in the police department thinks he's doing
a favor by losing Rose's ticket. But that's no favor. That's spreading the
myth that as long as an athlete puts the ball in the hoop, he's OK, all the
lights will turn green for him. Moss, a guy who obviously likes athletes --
his office wall  is covered with their photographs, and he hired Rose for a
summer job last year -- comes off the worst here. On Monday, he claimed he
knew nothing of the incident. On Tuesday, we heard otherwise:
  "Who told you about this incident back in October?" Fisher was asked.
  "Tom Moss told me."
  Of course, Moss wasn't the only guy covering up. Rose, as late as Monday,
insisted that he was not  in the Cloverlawn house, even when a reporter showed
him a police report with his name on it. And this is nothing compared to what
one of our public servants pulled off.
  "Weren't you suspicious of  favoritism when nothing came of it?" Fisher was
asked.
  "The word I got was that the police had it. And it was being dealt with
down there."
  It was dealt with, all right. Someone said "hocus pocus." Justice, stomped
by a Nike.
Plenty of bad judgment 
  Rose appeared at the press conference Tuesday with his friend and teammate,
Chris Webber. Rose had spent the night at Webber's house, like they  did when
they were kids. City kids. After Rose made his brief statement, and claimed
that he was only in that house "to help a friend" -- a cryptic statement on
which he did not elaborate -- Webber hugged  him and said, "You did all
right." They joked on their way out that they were "leaving the courtroom."
  Later, after practice, Rose was more somber. He ate the team meal before
boarding the bus for  the airport. He snuck out to avoid a TV crew. Two
security guards patrolled Crisler Arena, refusing entry to most outsiders.
  Inside, Fisher, his voice hoarse from the long day, was asked why Rose  had
initially denied ever being in that house.
  "My guess is he was scared," Fisher said.
  "What about this 'help a friend' story?"
  Fisher shrugged. "I don't know."
  Maybe he knows. Maybe  he doesn't. Maybe he's right when he says people see
Jalen "with the baggy shorts, the way he struts around" and they figure,
"there goes another one," like he somehow deserves all this.
  So for the  record, let us say: Jalen Rose is guilty of just one thing. Bad
judgment. A dope fiend? A criminal? No way.
  Just the same, he should face the music for the misdemeanor he was accused
of, and whoever  buried his ticket should be history.  All men equal. Those
are the rules. We lose this, we don't have a police department in Detroit, we
have cheerleaders.
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<DISCLAIMER>

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<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN
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