Pop Warner football coach arrested
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Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- A youth football coach has been stripped of his
responsibilities after facing drunk-driving and willful
child-endangerment charges in connection with a car accident he and three
of his team members were in last week in route to a weekend competition
in the town of Needles near the Arizona border.
Barrett Brown, a 35-year-old Pee Wee coach for the city’s Pop Warner
football chapter, was arrested by the California Highway Patrol after his
1995 Isuzu Rodeo overturned on a rural highway at 6:15 p.m. Friday, five
miles outside the California city, authorities said.
Brown’s attorney was unable to comment on the case Wednesday due to
its preliminary nature.
A Cypress resident, Brown was carrying three boys between 11 and 12
years old destined for a postseason consolation game Saturday in
Laughlin, Nev. None of the boys, nor Brown, were seriously hurt in the
accident.
“The boys were all wearing their seat belts,” said Officer Bill Haney,
spokesman for the California Highway Patrol. “Oddly enough, Brown was the
only person not wearing one.”
Brown and the boys suffered bruises and scratches, and were treated at
Needles Desert Communities Hospital and released that day.
Officials with the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department said
Brown was jailed over the weekend in lieu of $1,053 bail for drunk
driving, and $100,000 on the willful child-endangerment charge.
San Bernardino Superior Court Judge Joseph R. Brisco, of the Needles
office, dropped Brown’s cruelty to children bail down to $15,000 in a
Tuesday arraignment hearing, where the Cypress man pleaded not guilty to
all charges, court officials said.
Brown posted bail Wednesday morning, and is due back to the Needles
courtroom for a pretrial hearing Dec. 19.
San Bernardino County Deputy Dist. Atty. Mauri Braun said Brown faces
a maximum of five years in jail if convicted, one for each of the child
endangerment charges, as well as one year for causing injury while under
the influence of alcohol, and another for having a blood-alcohol level
above the state’s cap of 0.08%.
“This is an abominable situation and our thoughts and concerns go out
to boys and their families,” said Steven Sherman, president of Huntington
Beach Pop Warner. “It’s amazing that no one was seriously hurt ... we
were very lucky.”
At least one of the boys, he added, slipped out of his seat belt and
was thrown through the window of the sport utility vehicle after the
glass had popped out.
For the past two years, Brown has coached football for boys age 12
years old and younger in the Pop Warner organization, and was
representing the city chapter’s six team leaders on the agency’s board of
directors before the accident.
“Obviously, he has been removed both as coach and as a
representative,” Sherman said, adding that all coaching positions in Pop
Warner are voluntary, and until now, Brown has shown himself to be a fair
and compassionate team leader.
Pop Warner officials said the city’s chapter has zero tolerance for
alcohol use, and Brown “broke every rule.”
Brown’s team was one of five city teams traveling to play in the
Saturday football games. His three young passengers were not able to
participate, though one was able to attend the competition to cheer
teammates on, chapter officials said.
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