Donations, contributions and other efforts were sunk after the San Francisco Giants fan Bryan Stow was beaten in a Dodger Stadium parking lot on the opening day.
But a quiet move particularly affected family of the Stow, something that will affect his two children years down the line.
Former Giants star crenellated figure and Barry Bonds has volunteered to pay for the education of the old Tyler's College for 12 years and 8 years Tabitha.
"It was extraordinary for Barry Bonds, I thought:" Attorney family Stow Thomas Girardi said NBC Bay Area KNTV. "He didn't say anything about it to the press." It was just a gift he gave the family because he knew he was going to be quite important for children. ?
According to KNTV, bond spent an hour with Stow on April 22, when the paramedics for 42 years was still in Los Angeles County-University of Southern California Medical Center. Stow was moved on 16 may at San Francisco General Hospital, which is closer to his family and where he remains in a critical but stable condition under sedation heavy to prevent crises caused by traumatic brain injury.
Bonds also left signed a baseball bat for children of the Stow, according to KNTV.
Stow family filed a civil suit against the Dodgers in Los Angeles Superior Court Tuesday, damages not specified to cover future medical care of the Stow and as compensation for economic damage to Stow and his children. The family wants to return money which was handed over to the stowage of Bryan Fund, but will accept gift of links because it "means much to them.".
Other members of the Giants visited Stow, including pitcher Jeremy Affeldt, and Tim Lincecum gave $ 25,000 to the Fund of Bryan Stow.
Los Angeles police arrested Giovanni Ramirez, 31, Sunday but the charges were not filed against him. They have not identified a second attacker, or a woman suspected of driving the pair of the scene. Chief of police of Los Angeles Charlie Beck called Ramirez the main aggressor.
Ramirez was detained on a parole hold, with bail set at 1 million of $. Detectives had still not submitted their case to the district attorney Office. Detective Pjai Morris said more work of investigation was conducted, but he was convinced that the case would move forward.
Bonds, a seven-time MVP, was sentenced on 13 April of one count of obstruction of Justice to give an evasive answer in 2003 to a grand jury investigation on the distribution of the performance-enhancing drugs.
The jury deadlocked on all three counts, accusing the obligations of making false statements when he denied knowingly using performance-enhancing drugs and when he said that only his doctors injected him. Prosecutors have not said if they will retry connections on these counts.
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