Spur Posse
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Spur Posse was a group of high school boys from Lakewood, California, (many of them top high school athletes) who used a point system to keep track of and compare their sexual conquests. The founder of the group chose the name "Spur Posse" when a favorite basketball player of theirs, David Robinson, was signed to the San Antonio Spurs. The group came to national attention on March 18, 1993, when the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department arrested a number of the members for various sexual crimes. Prosecutors later dropped all but one of the charges after determining most of the encounters were consensual, albeit with underage girls. Members of the Spur Posse proceeded to make the rounds on the tabloid-TV talk-show circuit. The Spur Posse events are often compared to two other teen sex scandals of the era - the rape of a mentally challenged girl in 1989 by four popular "jocks" in Glen Ridge, New Jersey, and the 1996 syphilis epidemic among teens engaging in group sex orgies in Rockdale County, Georgia.
[edit] References
- Susan Faludi, "Stiffed: The Betrayal of the American Man" (Perennial 2000) ISBN 0-380-72045-0
- David Ferrell, "Spur Posse Goes on the Defensive", Los Angeles Times, March 20, 1993, at B1;
- Seth Mydans, "High School Gang Accused of Raping for Points", New York Times, March 20, 1993.
- Seth Mydans, "7 of 9 California Youths are Freed in a Case of Having Sex for Points" New York Times, March 23, 1993, at A14.
- Seth Mydans, "8 of 9 Teen-agers Freed in Sex Case" New York Times, March 24, 1993.
- David Ferrell, "New Charges Filed Against Member of Spur Posse Crime", Los Angeles Times, June 9, 1993, at B3;
- David Ferrell, "A Violent Death Marks the Spur Posse's Legacy Death", Los Angeles Times, July 8, 1995, at A1;

