WTF?! Knick Legend Charles Oakley banned from MSG for life Update: Oak @ game TONITE!

Its official...

Oakley is suing the garden

http://www.forbes.com/sites/ericmac...de-charles-oakley-v-james-dolan/#5d99a4b34b27

Oakley Can Fight Back

Assault & Battery

Oakley has said he did nothing wrong and has no idea why he got kicked out of the game. Oakley told The NY Daily News he did not put his hands on Knicks owner Jimmy Dolan, who reportedly was sitting near Oakley.

“I was there for four minutes,” Oakley said. “I didn’t say anything to him. I swear on my mother. They came over and wanted to know why I was sitting there. I bought the ticket. I said why do you guys keep staring at me. Then they asked me to leave. And I said I’m not leaving.”

Oakley could sue civilly for assault and battery, which is the act of threatening a person with violence and then actually physically harming that person. Breaking it down, the tort of assault refers to an intentional act that is meant to cause a reasonable apprehension of imminent and harmful contact. The tort of battery is an intentional act that results in harmful contact with another person without that person's consent. A battery can sometimes be seen as a completed assault, and for that reason, they are often grouped together.

In this case, Oakley may have a tough time being successful. It does appear security guards asked him to leave, and only put their hands on him after he offered physical resistance. Still, if Oakley can show that the security guards made harmful contact without his consent, then this claim could get some traction. Also noteworthy is that Oakley was knocked down twice. This could be used by Oakley to demonstrate the use of disproportionate force.

Oakley could also allege false imprisonment, which is the unlawful restraint of a person against his will by someone without legal authority or justification. If the claim for assault and battery fail, this too will fail.

Defamation

All of the claims, a claim for defamation is perhaps the most interesting. Defamation refers to a statement that is likely to lower the reputation of a person in the eyes of reasonable people. Truth is a defence to a claim for defamation.

The Knicks wrote in a statement that Oakley "came to the game tonight and behaved in a highly inappropriate and completely abusive manner…He was a great Knick and we hope he gets some help soon."

Being hopeful that Oakley gets “some help soon” could be seen to suggest that the former Knick is an alcoholic, has anger management issues or otherwise suffers from some type of personality disorder. If none of that is true, then it would be open to Oakley to consider a claim for defamation.

The entire incident is deeply troubling and unfortunate. That being said, it seems unlikely that we will see any legal action materialize from either side unless Oakley feels he was defamed.
 
Oak did his thing. That was a hell of a sacrifice. They're about to have to pay Rose some serious money because no one else will/ should come. This and the Melo thing. Some darker days ahead for NYK.
 
Man fuck James Dolan real talk. Fuckin stupid ass crakka.

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Former NBA player Jayson Williams defends friend Charles Oakley

NEW YORK -- It’s past midnight and Jayson Williams is beyond furious.

Williams has been fuming in Florida for hours, angrier at the New York Knicks and owner James Dolan than he ever was when he faced them as a player for the cross-town rival New Jersey Nets.

Williams isn’t just upset that his best friend, Charles Oakley, was arrested and charged with three counts of assault following an altercation in the stands at Madison Square Garden on Wednesday night.

What has Williams irate is the statement the Knicks put out moments after Oakley had been wrestled by Madison Square Garden security down onto the same floor where he used to collect almost as many floor burns as rebounds.

Williams said Dolan and the Knicks crossed the line by saying Oakley “was a great Knick, and we hope he gets some help soon" at the end of their statement.

“What pissed me off is when the (statement) said 'help' that they made it look like he was intoxicated," Williams told ESPN. "(If the Knicks meant Oakley had an) anger issue ... the anger issue is what made the Knicks what they were. ... It wasn’t about no damn anger issue when he was on the basketball court (playing for the Knicks). This made it look like the man was intoxicated. ... Charles Oakley buys a ticket to a Knicks game, and what is wrong with that? He is paying his $300 to watch the Knicks play.

"That statement was meant to hurt Oak. That was hateful. ... (Dolan) meant to hurt Oak."

The entirety of the Knicks statement on Twitter said: "Charles Oakley came to the game tonight and behaved in a highly inappropriate and completely abusive manner. He has been ejected and is currently being arrested by the New York City Police Department. He was a great Knick, and we hope he gets some help soon."

"being a coward" on the night in 2002 when he shot his limo driver, Gus Christofi, to death and tried to cover it up. Williams, who was convicted on four counts of covering up the shooting but was acquitted of aggravated manslaughter, pleaded guilty to aggravated assault and served an 18-month prison sentence before also serving another eight-month sentence for driving under the influence. The former All-Star with the Nets drank heavily, saying at his lowest moments that he would down "a fifth of moonshine" daily.

Williams was not the only one to take exception to the Knicks' statement. Via Twitter on Thursday, Chris Paul also bristled at the idea that Oakley needs help.

It’s no secret Oakley and Dolan have long been feuding. Oakley is one of the most beloved Knicks ever, legendary for his complete disregard for his body -- whether it was chasing another loose ball, delivering bone-crushing picks, rebounding, or being Patrick Ewing’s and other teammates’ 24/7 bodyguard on the court in an era that required it.

If Ewing was the franchise’s heart and John Starks defined the team’s desire during the 1990s, Oakley was the never-ending hustle that embodied New York City.

But Oakley is as outspoken as he is strong and prideful. He was devastated when he was traded to Toronto for Marcus Camby after a decade in New York. Yet Oakley never stopped loving the Knicks and New York.

So when his beloved Knicks are struggling, old-school-to-the-core Oak will criticize anybody he deems deserving of it -- sparing no one, especially the owner.

And that is a no-no at Madison Square Garden. During a season in which the Knicks have rolled out the red carpet for several of their beloved former players to celebrate their 70th season, Oakley has been Knick non grata.

Williams said he spoke to Oakley earlier Wednesday and knew the former Knick had purchased a ticket to see the Knicks play the Clippers. A police source told ESPN that Oakley purchased a seat a few rows behind Dolan and made comments at Dolan.

“I can guarantee you that he was not trying (to heckle Dolan),” Williams said. “I remember those two getting together to talk (one time). Me and a couple of other guys, we tried putting them together in a room, like, ‘This is New York, you guys got to get together (and try to bury the hard feelings).’

“Both of them said nothing to each other like two little kids. This might have been 10 years ago. They just stared at each other, and no one said nothing for about two minutes and walked away.”

On Wednesday, security went to usher Oakley out when the former Knicks enforcer pushed and shoved back as things got ugly. Even by the dysfunctional Knicks’ standards, this was bizarre and sad.

"That was tough for me to watch," said Clippers coach Doc Rivers, who played with Oakley in New York for two-plus seasons in the mid-1990s. "Honest to God, you could see it. I actually took three steps and I swear I was going to run down there, and I thought, 'What the hell am I going to do?' But I didn't like that. That's my guy. That was tough to watch from where I was standing.

"He's the best teammate in the world," added Rivers, who still keeps in touch with Oakley. "... I've been in the league a long time; I've never seen anything like that."
 
I can care less how much money another person has. I'll be damn if I ever let anyone disrespect me in any manner especially in the way Dolan has done to Oakley. It's the principle
That means they can tie shit up in court for ever costing you money in attorney fees. Plus a billionaire is going to have high level attorneys on deck.

Once Oakley put his hands on the guards it pretty much killed any hope of a civil case.
 
Look man

You know your organization has hit rock bottom when even the white fans turn on you and hate you even more for what you did to Charles Oakley

Typically something like that might get justified by white people but they are FURIOUS as they should be as fans he is a Knicks legend and was fully disrespected by their petty and incompetent owner

There is no end in sight for that franchise sorry to say
 
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