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    Gang take over ex-Liverpool star Jermaine Pennant’s abandoned £1Million mansion and turn it into huge cannabis factory

    JERMAINE Pennant’s mansion is at the centre of a police drugs investigation after a huge cannabis farm was discovered.The former Arsenal, Liverpool and Stoke City winger was stunned to learn a £1m property he lived in while playing at Anfield had been turned into an industrial scale drug-growing operation.
    Jermaine Pennant’s mansion has been turned into a drug denCredit: Getty
    A drug gang has been growing cannabis in the mansionCredit: YouTube
    Pennant bought the mansion, which boasts an outdoor swimming pool, for £1,025m in 2006 while playing for Liverpool.
    It has been abandoned since 2020 when the ex-footballer split with his then-partner.
    The 1930s property boasts an ornamental pond, tennis court, hot tub and an outdoor heated swimming pool.
    The scale of the cannabis farm was revealed on social media by an urban explorer who filmed himself wandering around the five-bedroom mansion in the upmarket area of Hale near Liverpool’s John Lennon airport.
    The explorer, who spent 35 minutes filming as he wandered around the property, said in a YouTube video: “They’ve had a big fat grow in here. Oh my God.. look at the chandelier up there.
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    “Guys we have just walked into a massive cannabis grow in an ex-footballer player’s house.”
    He continues: “Wow, this is former footballer Jermaine Pennant’s house and look at the mountains of weed everywhere. There is so much of the stuff it stinks.”
    Footage captured by the explorers and posted on YouTube showed dozens of plant pots, ducting pipes and windows taped up along with huge bin bags full of drugs paraphernalia piled up in a bathroom.
    The video also shows that a warrant to search the premises under section 23 of the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 was issued by magistrates in Carlisle on 2 September.
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    The warrant allowed police officers to search the property for “controlled drugs in all its forms of growth and production”.
    A Cheshire Police spokeswoman said: “On 5 January 2022 police executed a warrant at a property on Hale Road in Widnes.
    “A cannabis farm was found inside and a quantity of plants were seized.
    “At the time a 35-year-old man was arrested and has been released under investigation.
    “In September officers received further information of a cannabis farm at the same property on Hale Road.
    “Officers executed the warrant on 2 September and following a search no cannabis plants were located.”
    West Midlands Police is now understood to be dealing with the case.
    DRUG DEN
    Pennant lived in the house for three years before moving to Spanish La Liga side Real Zaragoza.
    The mansion is understood to have been empty for at least three years.
    Among the items found at the house are a picture of Pennant drinking from a McDonald’s cup.
    Pennant’s home was previously targeted by ram raiders in 2008 after they drove a car through his gates as he lay in bed with his girlfriend.
    Pennant joined Arsenal aged 15 in 1999 when they paid £2m for him to move from Notts County.
    But he only made 12 appearances for the Gunners before moving to Birmingham City in 2005.
    He was convicted of drink driving and played while wearing an electronic tag.He then moved to Liverpool and reached the pinnacle of his career when he played in the 2007 Champions League final.
    Following a three-year stint at Anfield he was sent out on loan to Portsmouth, Stoke City and Wolves before he became a journeyman star playing for clubs in Spain, India and Singapore.
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    Since retiring from football he has appeared on 2018 Celebrity Big Brother and dating show Celebs Go Dating.
    He has now signed up for the next series of Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins.
    Pennant bought the home for £1.25million in 2006Credit: YouTube
    He then left the home in 2020 after splitting with his partnerCredit: YouTube
    Police confirmed a quantity of plants were seizedCredit: YouTube
    Pennant lived in the house for three years before moving to Spanish La Liga side Real ZaragozaCredit: YouTube
    Penannt began his career at ArsenalCredit: Getty
    The star also played for Liverpool for three yearsCredit: AFP More

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    Stunning OnlyFans model who keeps flashing bum at football matches being investigated by police

    AN OnlyFans model is reportedly being investigated by police for flashing her bum at football matches.The adult platform content creator is a big fan of Serie B side Bari and has a season ticket at Stadio San Nicola.
    Coyote Cutee loves going to Bari gamesCredit: Instagram @coyotecutee
    The OnlyFans user is a regular at Stadio San NicolaCredit: Not known, clear with picture desk
    Known as “Coyote Cutee”, the redhead has been pictured numerous times revealing her bum at games.
    In one she can be seen wearing a red top and white underwear while holding a Bari scarf in the upper tier.
    While in another she poses on the stadium steps with her scarf aloft and her trousers pulled down.
    On her craft, the 22-year-old said: “As a woman, I feel free to show my body when I want and how I want.
    READ MORE BEAUTIFUL GAME
    “It’s my choice. I create content for OnlyFans and then sell it. I do everything myself. I don’t consider myself a porn star.”
    She could be landed in hot water, however, with reports in Italy claiming that she is being investigated by cops.
    If found guilty by police, Coyote Cutee could be fined thousands.
    She charges £22 per month for subscriptions to her OnlyFans.
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    HOW TO GET FREE BETS ON FOOTBALL
    And it is predicted that her account pockets her between £3,500 and £4,300 each month.
    When not working on her adult content, Coyote Cutee is claimed to study digital communication.
    She sits in the Curva Nord on Bari matchdays, and will be hoping that she can retain her season ticket despite potentially facing trouble.
    The 22-year-old feel free to show off her body
    She studies digital communicationCredit: Not known, clear with picture desk
    Coyote Cutee charges £22 a month
    The adult star sits in Bari’s Curva Nord More

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    Europa League clash between Malmo and Union Berlin SUSPENDED as firework explodes on pitch and riot police intervene

    MALMO’S Europa League clash with Union Berlin was suspended for 20 minutes after fans threw flares onto the pitch.In alarming scenes, a firework also appeared to go off in the stands as riot police were deployed.

    Union Berlin celebrate with their away supportersCredit: EPA
    Riot police were called inCredit: Reuters
    A firework appeared to go off pitchside
    Telly cameras captured the scary moment a lit flare landed on the field, just a few yards from a player.
    A club statement from Malmo after the match appeared to point the blame at travelling Union fans.
    It read: “Malmo FF deeply regrets the situation with the thrown pyrotechnics and bangers from the away section in connection with our home match against Union Berlin.
    “Tonight’s events are something we have never been close to before, something that does not belong in our stadium or any stadium in the world and we clearly distance ourselves from the illegal actions of the individuals in the away section who put other people in great danger.
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    “On Thursday evening, we contacted as many spectators as possible who were close to the events.
    “It must be safe to go to football. Eleda Stadium must be a safe place to visit. We will continue to work for that.”
    Union Berlin told a different story, however, writing on their official Twitter account: “This is a mess. There were at least two rockets from the Union end, at least one big flare from Malmo.
    “Now it’s a stand-off. No-one knows what will happen.”
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    They then added: “Just to clarify, it’s not certain yet they came from the Union block. Or what happened, there are question marks everywhere.
    “It was suddenly chaos. We are waiting for more information.”
    Trouble occurred early in the second half with the score level at 0-0.
    Following a 20 minute delay play resumed, with Sheraldo Becker firing Union to victory with a 68th minute strike.
    The result leaves Malmo bottom of the Europa League group with zero points after three games, with Union third on three points.
    The match was delayed by 20 minutesCredit: Reuters More

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    Footballer arrested after ‘breaking referee’s ribs, nose and dislocating shoulder’ during on-pitch assault

    A NON-LEAGUE footballer has been arrested on suspicion of serious assault of a referee. Dave Bradshaw was in charge of Saturday’s clash between Platt Bridge and Wigan Rose when he gave one of the Platt Bridge players a red card.
    A 24-year-old footballer has been arrested on suspicion of assaulting a refereeCredit: Getty
    The official then suffered a broken nose, four broken ribs, a dislocated shoulder, a broken collarbone, concussion and whiplash in the attack.
    Now Greater Manchester Police have confirmed a 24-year-old man is being held by cops over the incident.
    Senior investigating officer, Detective Inspector John Davies, said: “This is a serious assault in which the victim sustained significant, but not life-threatening, injuries.
    “GMP takes assaults such as this extremely seriously and we will be supporting the victim as the investigation progresses, to ensure his wellbeing.”
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    Bradshaw was rushed to hospital but has since been discharged.
    The referee said: “Hi all, been a very traumatic 12 hours, thanks for all the kind words.
    “I’ve sustained significant and substantial injuries but I’ll survive. My confidence has been smashed to bits but please, because of one person, don’t tarnish the club with the same brush.
    “The club is doing great things for the community. Up the refs.”
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    Platt Bridge confirmed on social media the player in question has already been released.
    The football club tweeted: “We as a club do not condone any violence towards anyone in the football community.
    “We are ashamed of what has happened, and the player is no longer playing with our team going forward.
    “We have spoken to the ref and apologised.
    “We as a team hope we can build our reputation back to what we have worked so hard for.”
    Anyone with information, images or videos of the incident at the Platt Bridge football pitches has been asked to get in touch with the police.
    Please contact GMP on 0161 856 7094 quoting reference number 2490-021022, 101 or through the independent charity, Crimestoppers, on 0800 555 111. More

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    Boxer David Haye arrives to face trial after ‘assaulting man’ at Hammersmith Apollo

    FORMER boxer David Haye has today arrived at court where he is due to stand trial charged with assaulting a man at a gig.The 41-year-old former cruiserweight and heavyweight world champion allegedly attacked Nickesh Jhala at the Hammersmith Apollo.
    David Haye is due to stand trial todayCredit: PA
    Haye was later arrested and charged as he stepped off a plane at Heathrow Airport in June.
    The alleged attack took place on October 30, 2021.
    Haye has arrived at Westminster Magistrates’ Court charged with assault.
    He will give evidence at the two-day trial, which will hear from nine witnesses in total.
    Read more on David Haye
    Haye is one of Britain’s most successful boxers – with a record 28 victories and just four defeats in his career.
    He spent time as both cruiserweight and heavyweight champion of the world before retiring in 2018.
    Haye made a one-fight comeback in September 2021, defeating good friend Joe Fournier in an exhibition clash.
    In 2012, the boxer appeared on I’m a Celebrity and came third.
    Haye is one of the UK’s most successful boxersCredit: PA
    He became a unified cruiserweight world champion in 2008Credit: AFP
    He then claimed the WBA title in 2009 after moving up to heavyweight statusCredit: Getty More

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    Deadly Soccer Clash in Indonesia Puts Police Tactics, and Impunity, in Spotlight

    Experts say officers are almost never held accountable for their actions. And in a huge police budget, billions are spent on tear gas, batons and other devices deployed during protests.For years, tens of thousands of Indonesians have faced off against a police force that many say is corrupt, uses brute force to suppress crowds and is accountable to no one.In the capital, Jakarta, the police shot and killed 10 people while protesters were campaigning against President Joko Widodo’s re-election in 2019. The next year, officers beat hundreds of people across 15 provinces with batons as they protested a new law. And in the northern city of Ternate in April, officers fired tear gas at a crowd of peaceful student demonstrators, sickening three toddlers.The world caught a glimpse of those tactics on Saturday, when riot officers in the city of Malang beat soccer fans with sticks and shields and, without warning, sprayed tear gas at tens of thousands of spectators crowded in a stadium. The police force’s methods set off a stampede that culminated in the deaths of 125 people — one of the worst disasters in the history of the sport.Experts said the tragedy laid bare the systemic problems confronting the police, many of whom are poorly trained in crowd control and highly militarized. In nearly all instances, analysts say, they have never had to answer for missteps.“To me, this is absolutely a function of the failure of police reform in Indonesia,” said Jacqui Baker, a political economist at Murdoch University in Perth in Australia, who studies policing in Indonesia.For more than two decades, rights activists and the government’s ombudsman have conducted inquiries into the actions of the Indonesian police. These reports, according to Ms. Baker, have often made their way to the chief of police, but to little or no effect.Riot police beat soccer fans with sticks and shields, and fired tear gas at tens of thousands of spectators at Kanjuruhan Stadium in Malang, Indonesia, on Saturday.H Prabowo/EPA, via Shutterstock“Why do we continue to be faced with impunity?” she said. “Because there is zero political interest in really bringing about a professional police force.”After the violence on Saturday, many Indonesians took to Twitter to call for the national police chief to be fired. And, as of Monday night, close to 16,000 people had signed a petition calling for the police to stop using tear gas. The government moved quickly to quell public anger, suspending the police chief in Malang and pledging to announce the names of the suspects responsible for the tragedy within days.The police in Indonesia were never this formidable or this violent. During the three-decade rule of the dictator Suharto, it was the military that was viewed as all powerful. But after his fall in 1998, as part of a series of reforms, the government assigned responsibility for internal security to the police, giving the force enormous power.In many instances, police officers have the final say on whether a case should be prosecuted. Accepting bribes is common, analysts say. And any accusation of police misconduct is left entirely to top officials to investigate. Most of the time, rights groups say, they do not.Wirya Adiwena, deputy director of Amnesty International Indonesia, said there “almost never has been” any trial over the excessive use of police force except in 2019, when two students were killed on Sulawesi Island during protests.Protesters in Jakarta demanded a government investigation into the killing of two university students in southeast Sulawesi in 2019.Adek Berry/Agence France-Presse — Getty ImagesOpinion polls have shown a sharp decline in public trust toward the police — dropping to 54.2 percent in August 2022 from 71.6 percent in April that year after reports emerged that a two-star police general had killed his subordinate and instructed other officers to cover it up.The lack of police accountability has coincided with a ballooning budget. This year, the national police budget stands at $7.2 trillion, more than double the figure in 2013. By share, its budget is the third-largest among all government ministries in the country, exceeding the amount given to the education and health ministries.Much of that money has been spent on tear gas, batons and gas masks. Andri Prasetiyo, a finance and policy researcher who has analyzed years of government procurement data, said that in the past decade, the national police have spent about $217.3 million to procure helmets, shields, tactical vehicles and other implements deployed during protests.The purchase of tear gas spiked in 2017 to $21.7 million, according to Mr. Andri, after Jakarta was rocked by a series of protests involving tens of thousands of Indonesians who demanded that the city’s first Chinese Christian governor in decades be jailed for blasphemy.Experts on policing say that 2019 was a turning point in the police force’s use of tear gas. In May of that year, officers clashed with demonstrators as protests over the presidential election devolved into violence, resulting in deaths, some of them involving teenagers.Rivanlee Anandar, the deputy coordinator of the rights watchdog the Commission for Missing Persons and Victims of Violence, says that there has been no “follow-up and investigation” into the deaths. He has visited the families of five victims and says that an autopsy had been performed in only one case, and that family has not learned the results.“We don’t know who the perpetrators are until today,” he said.The national police force budget has swelled to $7.2 trillion. Much of which has been spent on tactical gear such as tear gas, batons and gas masks.Ulet Ifansasti/Getty ImagesThe prevalent use of tear gas by the police has transcended geography. When faced with mass demonstrations, officers from Jakarta to Kalimantan have consistently reached for the chemical to subdue protesters. The budget for tear gas munitions, which had dropped after the 2017 allocation, soared again in 2020 to $14.8 million, a sixfold increase from the previous year, Mr. Andri said.That year, the police deployed tear gas in crowds protesting against coronavirus measures. Later in 2020, they used it again to disperse throngs demonstrating against a sweeping new law that slashed protections for workers and the environment. Amnesty International Indonesia said it had documented at least 411 victims of excessive police force in 15 provinces during those protests.“It’s become more of a pattern now,” said Sana Jaffrey, the director of the Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict in Jakarta.Ms. Jaffrey says that the police budget over the years has been allocated to quell many recent demonstrations, but that “the nuts and bolts and the daily grass-roots work of the police has been ignored.”In January this year, the national police spent almost $3.3 million to buy batons specifically for officers in the East Java Province, the location of Malang, according to Mr. Andri.In anticipation of violence at soccer matches, many police officers turn up decked out in helmets, vests and shields, and armed with batons. Some fan clubs have commanders who engage in physical training to prepare for fights. Several teams arrive at matches in armored personnel carriers.Still, experts said they were shocked at the police force’s chaotic response at the stadium on Saturday, given that soccer violence is common in the country — with frequent brawls between fans of rival clubs — and that the police should have a playbook for any unrest.Lighting candles during a vigil on Sunday for the victims outside the soccer stadium in Malang, Indonesia.Ulet Ifansasti/Getty ImagesIn 2018, riot police fired tear gas in the Kanjuruhan Stadium in Malang to quell violence during a match with the home team, Arema. A 16-year-old boy died days later. There were no reports of whether there was an investigation into his death or how the police had handled the riots.Now, the authorities plan to investigate what went wrong on Saturday, when thousands of supporters gathered in Malang to see Arema host Persebaya Surabaya. After Arema suffered a surprising defeat, 3-2, some fans ran onto the field. The police then unleashed a wave of violence and fired tear gas, witnesses said.The chief security minister said that officers suspected of wrongful violence at the stadium would face criminal charges.On Sunday, the police chief of East Java, Inspector General Nico Afinta, said that the police had taken actions that were in accordance with their procedures. He said that tear gas had been deployed “because there was anarchy,” and that fans “were about to attack the officers and had damaged the cars.”In a sign that the Malang Police Department had tried to anticipate the violence, it asked organizers to move the match to 3:30 p.m. “for security considerations,” according to a letter that was circulated online and whose contents were confirmed by the East Java Province police with The New York Times. An earlier time slot, the thinking went, would make the event more family-friendly. But the police request was rejected. The organizers could not immediately be reached for comment on Monday.Many rights activists say that to improve law enforcement tactics, they have consistently made these recommendations to the police: Do not immediately reach for the tear gas; do not swing batons at people on first instinct; understand how to control crowds; de-escalate conflict.“The standard operating procedure should not be that the police jumps from zero to 100,” said Mr. Wirya, of Amnesty International Indonesia.Dera Menra Sijabat More

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    Premier League international arrested on suspicion of raping two women has bail extended

    A PREMIER League footballer under investigation for two alleged rapes has had his bail extended by the Met Police.The player is accused of raping two women in separate attacks, one in June this year and one in April 2021.
    The star was arrested on suspicion of rape in JulyCredit: Getty
    The international star, 29, was arrested at his North London home on suspicion of rape in July after an alleged victim came forward.
    She claimed she was raped during a sunshine break in the Mediterranean in June.
    The alleged victim fled her five-star resort and flew home to her friends and family.
    She spoke to police on her return to the UK and attended a police station to make a full statement.
    She showed detectives photos that she claimed highlighted bruising on her body after the alleged attack.
    After his initial arrest he was later re-arrested on suspicion of two more counts from April and June 2021.
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    Cops later decided not to pursue the latter of those two accusations.
    He was bailed to August, which was then extended to this month and has now been extended again.
    A magistrates court is likely to approve the extension and confirm the bail conditions next week.
    It was previously reported that his club knew of the accusations last autumn, but that the player continued to play last season and has been a regular in 2022-23.
    He was also reportedly due to play in the World Cup in Qatar next month.
    The club confirmed in July that it would select him until further notice and that he would not be suspended.
    Neither the club nor the player are being named for legal reasons.
    A statement from The Met said: “On 4 July, a 29-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of rape and taken into custody.
    Most read in The Sun
    “While in custody, he was further arrested on suspicion of two incidents of rape that were alleged to have been committed in April and June of 2021 against a different woman in her 20s.
    “The man was bailed until a date in early October but his bail has since been extended further – an exact date has yet to be confirmed.” More

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    Death Is Rare at Soccer Games, but Aggressive Policing Can Light a Match

    This is not the first time this year that the sport has had to confront the reality that tragedies often result from failures of policing, security and crowd management.The tear gas still hung thick in the air at Kanjuruhan Stadium in Malang, Indonesia, as law enforcement reached into a playbook that is grimly familiar across the world.Officers had been given no choice but to fire the chemical into the crowd, the police chief for the province of East Java, Nico Afinta, said, “because there was anarchy.” The nightmarish scale of the disaster was not yet clear. Yet the police, the chief said, had to act. “They were about to attack the officers and had damaged the cars,” he said.The accusation that fans were to blame for another soccer tragedy was immediately recognizable from the tragedy at the Olembé Stadium in Cameroon — where eight people died in January during the Africa Cup of Nations — and the near miss in May at the Champions League final, European soccer’s showpiece game, in Paris.Those two incidents happened this year, but the trope dates back further: for example, to Port Said, Egypt, where 74 fans were killed in 2012; to Sheffield, England, where 97 Liverpool supporters went to a soccer game at Hillsborough Stadium and never came home in 1989.These are rare incidents, given the global scale of the sport, but they are bound by a common thread: When tragedies occur in soccer, they tend not to be the result of fan violence, but of an overzealous and, at times, aggressive style of policing that treats a large crowd as a threat and turns a game into a hazard.“It speaks to a mind-set that is too often too oriented toward public order, rather than public safety,” said Owen West, a senior lecturer in policing at Edge Hill University in Ormskirk, England. “You can see officers in full riot gear, crowd control munitions. It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.”He said law enforcement agencies assumed a need to “control” the crowd, and therefore tended to be “overzealous and over-resourced.” “Too often, it is actually the police action that triggers the adverse reaction in the crowds,” he said.The disaster Saturday in Malang carried an echo of the tragedy in Yaoundé, the Cameroonian capital, in January, when eight people were killed in a crush before an Africa Cup of Nations game between Cameroon and the Comoros.Then, the police had greeted the sight of thousands of fans trying to get into the Olembé Stadium by directing them to enter through a gate that was “closed for inexplicable reasons,” as Patrice Motsepe, the president of African soccer’s governing body, said. “If that gate was open, as it was supposed to be, we would not have had this loss of life,” he said.At Port Said, too, fans had found themselves with nowhere to run. That day, when supporters of the Egyptian team Al Masry attacked fans of rival Al Ahly after a game in the country’s Premier League, thousands more in the crowd tried to escape the violence. The doors to the stadium, though, had been locked, and were not opened to relieve the pressure. Seventy-four fans were killed.The use of tear gas, though, was most redolent of the chaotic scenes in Paris outside this year’s Champions League final, contested by Real Madrid and Liverpool.UEFA, European soccer’s governing body, had two of its previous showpiece games marred by a failure to manage an entirely anticipated crowd. First, at the final of the delayed 2020 European Championship, held at Wembley Stadium in London in July 2021, thousands of fans broke through security barriers to gain entry.Then, after this year’s Europa League final between Eintracht Frankfurt and the Scottish team Rangers in Seville, Spain, both clubs took the unusual step of issuing a joint letter of complaint to UEFA about the way their fans were treated.Paris, though, was the most worrisome of all. French authorities funneled tens of thousands of Liverpool fans through narrow passageways, causing bottlenecks at the entrance to the stadium. Many in the crowd waited for hours at gates that either opened only a few minutes before the game was scheduled to start or did not open at all.As they waited, French security officers fired tear gas into tightly packed crowds.An officer spraying tear gas at Liverpool fans before the Champions League final in France in May.Matthias Hangst/Getty ImagesUEFA initially advised those fans already in the stadium, as well as viewers watching at home, that the game would be delayed because of the “late arrival” of so many supporters, despite knowing at the time that many of the fans trapped outside had arrived hours before the scheduled start time.That trope was seized upon by the French authorities, who in the days afterward tried to blame tens of thousands of fans bearing forged tickets for the problems. The number of fake tickets, however, was grossly overstated and a French Senate inquiry in July faulted the authorities for what it called a “fiasco” at the final, determining that poor coordination, bad planning and multiple errors, including the use of tear gas on fans, had caused the chaos.Five months later, their counterparts in Indonesia directed responsibility away from themselves in the same way in their initial statements. They centered blame for the deaths of at least 125 fans on those supporters who had encroached the field of play at Kanjuruhan Stadium after an Indonesian league game between Arema and Persebaya Surabaya, rather than on the officers who had sought to deal with that offense by firing tear gas into an area where there was no easy escape from it.“It is incredibly dangerous to use a dispersal tactic such as tear gas in this case,” said West, the policing expert. “Chiefly in the minds of officers thinking about that tactic should be where people are expected to disperse to. Some of the reporting talks about panic, which suggests an irrationality on the part of the crowd. But running away from something that is doing so much damage to your breathing, eyesight and general health is an entirely rational decision.”According to the stadium safety and security regulations published by FIFA, soccer’s world governing body, “crowd control gas” should not be “carried or used” by stewards or police officers positioned on the side of the field inside a stadium. FIFA, though, admitted Sunday that those principles can only be guidelines at domestic competitions subject to national safety and security regulations.In a statement Sunday, Indonesia’s Legal Aid Foundation condemned “the excessive use of force through the use of tear gas,” and blamed it for the large number of fatalities in Malang, an assertion supported by eyewitnesses. “The tear gas was overdone,” said Suci Rahayu, a photographer who was in the stadium. “Many people fainted. If there wasn’t tear gas, there wouldn’t be such a riot.”Austin Ramzy More