Skip to main content

Youth sports referee wants to stop parents’ bad behavior at kids’ games

WASHINGTON — A referee is blowing the whistle on parents who act out and even start fights at their kids’ games.

Oklahoma dad and soccer referee Brian Barlow was fed up with parents behaving badly at games, so he started the “STOP” initiative, which stands for Stop Tormenting Officials Permanently. Part of the effort includes posting videos of the ugly behavior on a Facebook page called Offside.

“More than 150,000 people see those videos. It publicly shames the person, and that alone changes and modifies people’s behavior usually,” Barlow said.

Barlow offers $100 to people who submit the videos. What’s on them? The “F” word plays a starring role and “a lot of cussing,” Barlow said.

But, he added, “The worst part of what I’ve witnessed is when there’s actual physical violence that transpires.”

Over 64 percent of referees said they have had to eject spectators from youth games for bad behavior.

Barlow said there’s no excuse for parents to lose it. “All these players are watching, and they’re sponges, so they’re not learning how to play soccer, they’re learning how to fight when the whistle doesn’t go their way,” he said.

Here’s an example of a video from the Offside Facebook page. There’s a brief flash of violence and lots of yelling.

https://www.facebook.com/youreoffside/videos/1922110301413329/

South Korean minister vows to expand legal remedies for adoptees and other rights victims

GWACHEON, South Korea (AP) — South Korea's justice minister has pledged to expand access to judicial remedies for victims of state-led abuses, including foreign adoptees whose adoptions were marred by widespread fraud under previous military governments. Using unusually strong language for a senior South Korean official, Justice Minister Jung Sung-ho said the country’s past adoptions amounted to “forced child trafficking” and that the government will largely refrain from appealing rulings in cases brought by victims seeking compensation for government wrongdoing. Jung spoke Thursday in a roundtable interview with selected journalists. Hundreds of Korean adoptees in the West have already requested that their cases be investigated by a fact-finding commission reviewing past human rights violations. The body was relaunched in February after its previous mandate ended in November. That earlier Truth and Reconciliation Commission concluded that the government bore responsibility for an adoption program riddled with fraud and malfeasance, driven by efforts to cut welfare costs and carried out by state-authorized private agencies that systematically manipulated children’s origins. Some adoptees hope the commission’s findings will provide legal grounds for damages lawsuits against the government or their adoption agencies. But victims of other government abuses recognized by the commission have often been locked in lengthy legal battles after state prosecutors appealed rulings in their favor, citing expired statutes of limitations or deeming the commission’s findings inconclusive.
Read Next Story