On Monday, former NBA veterans Brendan Haywood and Ryan Hollins discussed Brown’s settlement of $750,000 and raised the question: Was it enough?
“There is never a price that you can put on behind whipping that did not deserve. From people who are supposed to protect and serve, that racially profile you. The biggest thing to me was not the money,” said Haywood.
“When I saw the settlement, ‘The City of Milwaukee will reportedly pay Brown $750,000 to settle the lawsuit, but the agreement also includes more than just money." According to The Athletic, "the city will also publicly admit to violating Brown’s constitutional rights and implement concrete changes to the Milwaukee Police’s standard operating procedures within the next 180 days of signing the agreement. It [is] not yet known what those changes will be,” read Haywood.
“That is the biggest part of that deal. The city had to say hey, 'our cops were racist.' They saw a black man, and he did not comply; they thought he should, instead of giving him due process, as we would a white person. We whooped his ass, and that is big because, during the season, they were originally going to give him $400,000, but the city was not going to admit any wrongdoing. And he said no, so $750k and the city, saying we were wrong, and we will be moving forward differently. I’m okay with this. I would love to see him get $5 million, but Sterling Brown has money.”
Ryan Hollins shared that he got pulled over once while playing for the Celtics, and when the cop realized it, he let Hollins go.
“If you let me know that you played for the Celtics, I would have let you go a long time ago,” said Hollins.
Haywood also shared a story of when he got pulled over in Charlotte.
“I got pulled over in Charlotte; this was when I was playing with [the] Dallas [Mavericks]. I had always lived in Charlotte. I got pulled over; the cop asked me, but I had a Dallas license. It expired during the season, so I had to get a Dallas license while in Dallas."
Recounting the event, Haywood said that the police officer that pulled him over assumed that the car was stolen. Since the license plate number did not match the address on Haywood’s driver's license. The officer called for backup, and when they arrived, the second officer verified Haywood’s identity.
Not too long after, they let him go.
“They let me go a minute later. Had the cop not said this is [Brendan] Haywood, that could have been a totally different experience,” said Haywood.
Haywood played 13 seasons in the league and won a championship in 2011 as a part of the Dallas Mavericks.