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Teens' Nerf guns raise ruckus
The Cincinnati Enquirer ^ | 05/06/2004 | Sheila McLaughlin

Posted on 05/06/2004 7:43:08 AM PDT by TC Rider

BLUE ASH - Dressed in camouflage, their skin smeared with dark paint, the young warriors lie in wait in bushes for hours before dawn to ambush an opponent leaving for school.


Blue Ash Police Officer Michael Bray checks out a homemade soft-dart gun at police headquarters. On the table are confiscated homemade and commercially produced Nerf dart guns and two-way radios. The Cincinnati Enquirer/GLENN HARTONG

With an eye on a $1,600 prize for the last team standing, they track one another at work, baseball games, even church youth gatherings, looking for a "kill."

They hire informants to spy, and friends and siblings are paid to set up adversaries for ambushes. They chase one another in cars. Both boys and girls run through their neighborhoods stripped down to mere thongs, invoking a rule that renders them "invisible" to their enemy.

Their feats in "Dart Wars" are the stuff of legend among Sycamore High School students. The six-week rite of spring using Nerf dart guns as weapons has been going on for almost a decade, and students look forward to what they describe as harmless, challenging fun.

Nerf guns use springs to compress air and shoot shoot soft foam darts or balls.

School officials and police would like to see Dart Wars disappear. The elaborate Rambo-style game of tag has become so popular that it dominates the lives of about 200 student players and is the daily talk of the school, starting the day after spring break ends.

Sycamore administrators say Dart Wars is too disruptive.

Blue Ash police say it's too dangerous.

Since this year's game started April 12, officers have drawn their guns on a student and threatened others with criminal charges. They worry about a player being shot by a scared homeowner or that a real criminal will be overlooked as a dart-game player.

"Quite frankly, if I was in high school, it looks like something that would be pretty much fun," said Lt. Dennis Boone, who is commander of the city's road patrol. "It would look harmless until you think in this day and age, with all the crazy things going on right now, the timing is probably just not really good for this."

Leery police

Andrew Shaver is a Rum Runner. The 17-year-old junior and four teammates fashion themselves as hard-core warriors who take Dart Wars seriously.

This year and last, Andrew carried an automatic Nerf gun with a "power clip" capable of holding 10 darts. He dressed in camo and painted his face.

"I've always liked watching Rambo movies, and I just like military stuff ... going out with face paint like the Marines," Andrew said.

Blue Ash police investigated a complaint that Andrew and a teammate shot from a driveway at an opponent in a garage on Woodlands Way. A concerned neighbor driving by at 7:15 a.m. called police. Officers threatened to charge the three teens with inducing panic. Parents and their sons spent two hours at the station meeting with a sergeant and promised that their sons were out of the game.

"They said they weren't trying to single us out, but it was obvious that they were," Andrew said. He was later disqualified when he was found with a dart gun on school grounds.

Andrew's mother, Ginger Shaver, said officers have legitimate concerns. But she thinks that the response by Blue Ash police is too harsh. Andrew is her third and last child playing the game since 1998.

"The kids are involved in what's considered a legal pastime in terms that it is an elaborate game of tag," she said. "I obviously don't feel it's anything to get really worked up about."

Shaver thinks that if more was done to publicize the annual competition, residents wouldn't overreact and call police needlessly.

So far this spring, Blue Ash police have confiscated about 15 Nerf guns and PVC pipes fashioned into blowguns, as well as a pair of walkie-talkies.

Three days into the competition, Blue Ash officers pulled guns on a student in the parking lot of an apartment complex on Timbers Drive. They had received a report at 6:36 a.m. of a male in fatigues crouched by a silver Firebird. The resident told police that the man was "possibly holding a rifle."

Chief Chris Wallace said the department "pretty much has a zero-tolerance policy" for Dart Wars. Boone said his officers have been told since the beginning that they have discretion to file charges against Dart Wars players if they think the incident warrants it. They also are cautioned never to let their guard down on any run. So, they are justified in pulling their pistols.

"We see our share of crazy stuff - people with guns and people who are nuts - and they leave it to us in a split second to decide who is crazy, what is a real gun and who is a high school kid with a fake gun playing Dart Wars in the dark wearing camo," Boone said.

However, police in Montgomery - where the high school is located and many of the kids live - don't confiscate dart guns and don't interfere unless players commit a crime, Chief Kirk Nordbloom said.

"Don't think for a minute we aren't concerned about this," he said. "But, our stance is, if you abide by the law, you won't have a problem with it. Play your game. But, if you break the law, you pay the price."

Police in both communities say they have responded to Dart Wars incidents for years involving trespassing, suspicious activity, car wrecks, lawn jobs and reports of teens running naked through yards shooting each other.

Cash and a thrill

For players, Dart Wars offers the chance to turn an $8 entry fee into $200 or more. But the jackpot isn't the only draw.

"If you win Dart Wars, you can brag about that for years," said Matt McKeown, an 18-year-old senior who is one of this year's organizers. "I don't know how to explain it. We still sit down and talk about stories from sophomore year. It's just so much fun. I love it. I love it."

Versions of Dart Wars have been waged by students at other high schools through the years. Norwood played it briefly in 1985, and a mini-game surfaced last year among Loveland high-schoolers.

But, no one, apparently, does it as Sycamore does. The game started nine or more years ago as an invitation-only competition with 40 to 50 players.

Rules - from the type of weapons and darts permitted to infractions that call for disqualification - were added in 1998 in an effort to keep the game organized as more male and female students joined in and more money was pumped into the kitty.

This year, girls make up a quarter of the teams, and a couple of teams are coed. A five-player team pays $40 to get into the game, pushing the jackpot this spring to $1,600 for the winning team. Winners stand to take home $200 or more apiece after some money is given to a charity and judges are paid to offset expenses.

Cautioning kids

Parents have mixed feelings about the game. They see some benefits, but worry, especially when their kids are out in a car.

Pat Linhardt has warned his closest neighbors that his son, Kyle, is involved in the game. He's cautioned Kyle, a junior, to be "real darn careful about driving."

"It's not bad for kids to have to organize something, make their own rules and then follow them. But the whole aspect of them running around trying to shoot each other gets a little crazy," Linhardt, of Symmes Township, said.

In the Dewald family, two sons and a daughter have graduated through the game. Son Chad, the eldest, is given credit for setting the rules.

"It was a real good way of getting to know your classmates. Really, it was just good clean fun," mother Marty Dewald said.

Dewald thinks her kids learned something along the way. Chad strengthened his arbitration skills when he had to settle player disputes as a game judge. Planning ambushes and other trickery exercised a lot of creativity, she said.

In lieu of drinking

Sycamore High School officials began cracking down on the game in the late 1990s. They banned any Dart Wars activity on school grounds and school-sponsored events in 1999 after a carload of students was rear-ended jumping from a vehicle to shoot another team.

Associate Principal Jim Skoog has gained a reputation as the "commandant" in charge of confiscation. It is his job to police the parking lot and take guns and darts that are visible in cars.

The first day of Dart Wars this year, he collected 25 guns and put five teams out of business. They were disqualified for breaking the "no-school" rules.

"We nailed a bunch of them, and that's the easy way to do it. Nobody knows the rules or reads them all. They just start to play," Skoog said.

He's talked to police in both communities about calling a halt to Dart Wars. Officers suggested that Montgomery and Blue Ash could pass resolutions to outlaw the game, he said. So far, nothing has been done.

"That's the only way that it would stop," Skoog said.

Players say it would be unfair to kill off Dart Wars.

"As long as there is no damage to property, it's not hurting anything. It's not illegal," Andrew Shaver said. "I think it's something for kids to do instead of going out drinking or something like that. It's a good alternative."


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: 2ndammendment; bang; banglist; confiscation; nerf; police; policestate; rkba; zerotolerance
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Sounds like fun to me, so long as they keep it safe.
1 posted on 05/06/2004 7:43:09 AM PDT by TC Rider
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To: TC Rider
They should keep to traditional teenage activities - marching in pro-abortion parades, holding gay-day activities and dressing like Britney Spears...
2 posted on 05/06/2004 7:48:59 AM PDT by 2banana (They want to die for Islam and we want to kill them)
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To: TC Rider
It is fun. We used to play this back in high-school and college in the 80s - we called it Assassin back then. Heck, they even made a cheezy 80's movie out of the craze (I think the film was called "T.A.G. - The Assassination Game"). The cops are totally justified in taking precautions, though.
3 posted on 05/06/2004 8:00:37 AM PDT by egarvue (Martin Sheen is not my president...)
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To: TC Rider
So far this spring, Blue Ash police have confiscated about 15 Nerf guns and PVC pipes fashioned into blowguns, as well as a pair of walkie-talkies.

Sounds like the Blue Ash Police could stand a bit of a force reduction.

 

That's mighty fine
work boys.

4 posted on 05/06/2004 8:01:37 AM PDT by Fixit (But I'm a public servant. I can't use my judgment.)
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To: TC Rider
Officers suggested that Montgomery and Blue Ash could pass resolutions to outlaw the game, he said. So far, nothing has been done.

Blue Ash is the only city in Hamilton County with any common sense and good business sense. Warren County should annex them.

Cincinnati is the Hellmouth on the Ohio.

5 posted on 05/06/2004 8:02:40 AM PDT by Corporate Law (<>< -- Xavier Basketball - Perennial Slayer of #1 Ranked Teams)
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To: egarvue
When I graduated from HS back in '70, it was common to bring in squirt guns (no nerfs then) after spring break for a day or two. Very unorganized. The game was over when the Nuns had confiscated all of the squirt guns.
6 posted on 05/06/2004 8:02:58 AM PDT by TC Rider (The United States Constitution © 1791. All Rights Reserved.)
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To: egarvue
We played the same game in college in the late 80's and early 90's. We used the gun that shoots the suction cup darts. It was a blast!
7 posted on 05/06/2004 8:03:38 AM PDT by Pest (I will choose Free Will!)
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To: Fixit
LOL, perfect!
8 posted on 05/06/2004 8:09:05 AM PDT by TC Rider (The United States Constitution © 1791. All Rights Reserved.)
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To: TC Rider
It does sound like loads of fun, but I can understand the problems it causes in today's society.
9 posted on 05/06/2004 8:09:39 AM PDT by mtbopfuyn
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To: TC Rider
"You'll shoot your eye out, Ralphy."
10 posted on 05/06/2004 8:10:29 AM PDT by Redcloak (Have you hugged your tagline today?)
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To: egarvue
They are justified in being aware of the game (we called it KAOS or "Killer As Organized Sport" when I played in college. Bigtime fun. I offed one of my victims with a tape recorder. "I am a ten second bomb! I am a ten second bomb! Nine! BOOM!....I lied.") and checking up. BUT pulling a gun on any of the players is a stupid and extreme over reaction. If it is banned from school grounds (as it should be) take the nerf guns and disqualify the player.

If a cop draws on anyone just because they look or are doing something "hinky" then they are putting innocent people at risk. The coppers should lighten up.
11 posted on 05/06/2004 8:11:18 AM PDT by Rifleman
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To: *bang_list
Bang
12 posted on 05/06/2004 8:14:14 AM PDT by Atlas Sneezed (Your Friendly Freeper Patent Attorney)
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To: TC Rider
The nattering nannies want to castrate teenage boys, until all they are good for is watching "Queer Eye," doing their nails, and going to Gay-Straight Alliance meetings at their high school.
13 posted on 05/06/2004 8:14:17 AM PDT by valkyrieanne
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To: TC Rider
There used to be a standard joke on the web that gun banners wouldn't be happy until all that was left for people to own was the consistency of NERF so as to preclude the use of anything as a weapon.

Well, turns out NERF is up for confiscation as well.

14 posted on 05/06/2004 8:17:35 AM PDT by Fixit (Not Exactly Relishing Freedom)
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To: egarvue
Heck, they even made a cheezy 80's movie out of the craze (I think the film was called "T.A.G. - The Assassination Game").

"Gotcha!" starring Anthony Edwards. 1985.

15 posted on 05/06/2004 8:19:32 AM PDT by al_c
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To: al_c
You are both right

Tag: The Assassination Game

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0084756/


Gotcha!

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0089222/
16 posted on 05/06/2004 8:24:16 AM PDT by Fixit (Not Exactly Relishing Freedom)
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To: TC Rider
"So far this spring, Blue Ash police have confiscated about 15 Nerf guns and PVC pipes fashioned into blowguns, as well as a pair of walkie-talkies."

Under what constitutional amendment are they allowed to do this? Last time I checked the Fifth Amendment said that a person was not to be deprived of property without due process of the law.
17 posted on 05/06/2004 8:31:06 AM PDT by Blood of Tyrants (Even if the government took all your earnings, you wouldn't be, in its eyes, a slave.)
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To: TC Rider
Chief Chris Wallace said the department "pretty much has a zero-tolerance policy" for Dart Wars. Boone said his officers have been told since the beginning that they have discretion to file charges against Dart Wars players if they think the incident warrants it. They also are cautioned never to let their guard down on any run. So, they are justified in pulling their pistols.

"Don't think for a minute we aren't concerned about this," [ Chief Kirk Nordbloom] said. "But, our stance is, if you abide by the law, you won't have a problem with it. Play your game. But, if you break the law, you pay the price."

He's talked to police in both communities about calling a halt to Dart Wars. Officers suggested that Montgomery and Blue Ash could pass resolutions to outlaw the game, he said. So far, nothing has been done.


And no one questions how dangerous to society at large it is to have have chiefs of police who confuse their own orders based on their own tastes with the law. Remember several years ago some municipality that wouldn't hire any cops of above "average" intelligence for fear they would move on to some other job? I wonder if that is what has been going on here.
18 posted on 05/06/2004 8:34:40 AM PDT by aruanan
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To: aruanan
Remember several years ago some municipality that wouldn't hire any cops of above "average" intelligence for fear they would move on to some other job?

New London, CT, among others.

U.S. Justice Department Wants "Dumbed Down" Cops

(06/13/97)

"The Justice Department's Civil Rights Division has been pressuring police forces across the country to abandon "cognitive" entrance exams [exams based upon mental ability, reasoning skills, and intelligence], which test for basic reading, writing, memory and reasoning skills.

"The Department argues that such tests are illegal because they exclude too many minorities from police ranks. Cognitive test supporters say the tests are needed to assure that officers have the mental skills to make quick decisions about everything from the constitutional rights of suspects to the use of deadly force.

"As of 1993, some 83 percent of large city and county police forces used cognitive tests in hiring -- but that may be about to change. After years of pressure from the Justice Department, Nassau County, N.Y., agreed to replace its cognitive-based entrance exam with one that was based on personality -- in which applicants had to score only as well as the bottom 1 (one) percent of current police officers on a reading exam.

Note the date.
19 posted on 05/06/2004 8:56:27 AM PDT by Fixit (http://cafeshops.com/W2004)
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To: Fixit
Yep ... and both were very lame, IMO.
20 posted on 05/06/2004 9:35:43 AM PDT by al_c
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