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This just isn't going to end well, is it..sigh
#1
More risky actions are being alleged against former Minnesota Viking Everson Griffen, this time he has been ticketed for going 130 miles per hour on a Twin Cities interstate while on probation for drunken driving.

The 37-year-old Griffen was stopped about 10:15 p.m. Friday in Minnetonka by police on Interstate 494 near Stone Road, according to court records.

The citation, for misdemeanor reckless driving and petty misdemeanor speeding, says Griffen was driving a Bentley Bentayga SUV at 130 mph. That’s more than double the 60 mph speed limit on that stretch of interstate.

The Minnesota Star Tribune reached out to Griffen on Wednesday regarding the traffic stop.

Griffen, who has remained in the Twin Cities after his retirement, was accused in July of creating an unspecified scene soon after takeoff from Chicago to the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, according to TMZ Sports.

Delta Air Lines said pilots went back to O’Hare International Airport “to have an unruly passenger removed.”

In November, Griffen was sentenced to a 60-day term for driving while drunk in May on a Minneapolis interstate. Judge Gina Brandt set aside a year in the workhouse for Griffen and put him on supervisory probation for four years.

In July 2023, he was stopped in Chanhassen and accused of driving 60 mph in a 40 mph zone. His blood-alcohol content was 0.09%. Griffen pleaded guilty to a reduced careless driving charge in February 2024 and was placed on a year’s probation.

In the months following that allegation, Griffen crashed his car into a fence and gazebo in Mound on Oct. 28, 2023. He was cited and convicted of failure to drive with due care, a petty misdemeanor.

On Dec. 7, 2023, in Shakopee, police stopped Griffen for driving 55 mph in a 30 mph zone. He was convicted of a petty misdemeanor in that case as well.

In December 2021, following multiple troubling incidents, Griffen announced on social media that he had been living with bipolar disorder.

Griffen called 911 shortly after 3 a.m. from his Minnetrista home on Nov. 24, 2021, saying someone was with him, and he needed help. He also told the dispatcher he fired one round from a gun, but no one was wounded, police said. They added that no intruder was found.

The same day, Griffen had posted, then deleted, a video on Instagram saying people were trying to kill him as he held a gun in his hand. He was alone inside the house, with police outside, until he emerged and agreed to be taken for treatment.

He also spent four weeks undergoing mental health treatment in 2018 after two incidents that September — one at the Hotel Ivy in downtown Minneapolis, the other at his home — that prompted police involvement. 

He later revealed he lived in a sober house for the remainder of the 2018 season.

Strib
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#2
He won't stay on his meds....and with his issues, off the meds mean shit like this will keep happening. Driving a car at 130 mph means you can't react to stop or swerve for anything, its just too fast. That's how people get killed, especially innocent ones.
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#3
(09-03-2025, 08:56 AM)StickierBuns Wrote: He won't stay on his meds....and with his issues, off the meds mean shit like this will keep happening. Driving a car at 130 mph means you can't react to stop or swerve for anything, its just too fast. That's how people get killed, especially innocent ones.

I was thinking this is a systematic issue with mental health system (i.e. gun violence etc.)

But if you arent institutionalized? You cant force someone to take their meds. Not that I'm aware of anyhow. 

Wonder what the family/friends can do? Its not going to end well...
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#4
(09-03-2025, 09:06 AM)purplefaithful Wrote: I was thinking this is a systematic issue with mental health system (i.e. gun violence etc.)

But if you arent institutionalized? You cant force someone to take their meds. Not that I'm aware of anyhow. 

Wonder what the family/friends can do? Its not going to end well...

Which really is the problem. Most of this kind of stuff is mental health combined with substance abuse of some type and these people cannot be forced to take their meds. They can be placed on mental health holds, but 99% of the time they hold them just long enough to get them detoxed from whatever is in their bodies, give them meds to stabilize them, then kick them out with a future doctors appointment. The problem is most of these folks aren't capable of wiping their own asses much less being put in charge of following up with their own mental health issues. It's a nation wide broken system. The answer really is to open up mental health institutions again because you don't have the right to drive 130 mph potentially injuring someone else, you don't have the right to drop your pants and shit on a public sidewalk, you don't have the right to plant a tent in a public park and take up residency while you do nothing all day but do drugs or drink. This country has a major issue on this front
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#5
(09-03-2025, 09:06 AM)purplefaithful Wrote: I was thinking this is a systematic issue with mental health system (i.e. gun violence etc.)

But if you arent institutionalized? You cant force someone to take their meds. Not that I'm aware of anyhow. 

Wonder what the family/friends can do? Its not going to end well...

at this point he needs to be locked up,  I know its not the best path for people with mental issues,  but do innocent people need to die before he gets put away from society?

there are monitors for all sorts of health issues,  I wonder if somebody can make chem specific monitors that will alert professionals when a person goes off their prescribed meds?  kind of as a condition of their release they have to wear this monitor.  ( think ankle bracelet for the chemically imbalanced)
Why isn't Chuck Foreman in the Hall of Fame?
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#6
About a dozen years ago I was working for a guy who was bipolar (while being a functioning alcoholic...what could go wrong?).
You just never knew who was going to show up each day. Did he take his meds or not?
Mental health is nothing to dismiss.
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#7
(09-03-2025, 09:06 AM)purplefaithful Wrote: I was thinking this is a systematic issue with mental health system (i.e. gun violence etc.)

But if you arent institutionalized? You cant force someone to take their meds. Not that I'm aware of anyhow. 

Wonder what the family/friends can do? Its not going to end well...

Sadly I agree.  Our mental health crisis hasn't improved since closing down so many of the institutions.  Some were bad places and nobody should be abused or mistreated.  But leaving them out on the streets (living there or driving 130) isn't good for them or anyone else.
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#8
I wonder where his support team, family, friend are in all of this. His choice to take his medications, but if not then he has made plenty of money in his career to be able to have a driver. If I were an agent for any of these guys, the first thing I would have them do with their money is hire a driver, as so many of them get into trouble on the road. Had Addison done that after his first incident he would be playing Monday.
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#9
(09-03-2025, 09:40 AM)JimmyinSD Wrote: at this point he needs to be locked up,  I know its not the best path for people with mental issues,  but do innocent people need to die before he gets put away from society?

there are monitors for all sorts of health issues,  I wonder if somebody can make chem specific monitors that will alert professionals when a person goes off their prescribed meds?  kind of as a condition of their release they have to wear this monitor.  ( think ankle bracelet for the chemically imbalanced)

I agree.  This is where a Three Strikes type of scenario should come into play.  At some point, it is brutally obvious this man is going to kill someone else and likely himself.  He should be placed in a psych ward or jail, and only once he's totally proven to whip the problem (I'm talking 10 yrs type the problem) should he ever be released back into the wild.  Somebody will die because of this guy.
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#10
(09-03-2025, 10:16 AM)greediron Wrote: Sadly I agree.  Our mental health crisis hasn't improved since closing down so many of the institutions.  Some were bad places and nobody should be abused or mistreated.  But leaving them out on the streets (living there or driving 130) isn't good for them or anyone else.

Prioritization and $$$. If its not going to get done on the Fed level? Then its up to the states...

But the states are already scrambling and stretched. IOW, I am not expecting much to change. 

Oh, we're having our discussions in MN after last weeks tragedy in a catholic church, but I am expecting little bi-partisan action as an outcome.
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