Kobe Bryant’s wife shares tribute on Instagram l ABC News

Vanessa Bryant made her first public statement since the helicopter crash and reopened her Instagram account that showed a trove of family videos with Kobe and his four daughters.

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#ABCNews #KobeBryant #KobeRIP #Instagram

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42 thoughts on “Kobe Bryant’s wife shares tribute on Instagram l ABC News

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  2. What if before the helicopter goes down they already jumped? And what if they're survived? WHAT IFFFFF

    😭💔

  3. Well miss you Kobe..we from Philippines loves you and we're so sad for your lost..😭😭😭
    Rip Mamba..salute to you brother..!!!

  4. 🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾 for you Vanessa that God give you unspeakable strength 🙏🏾 you & the girls are in my prayers always, and to all the others lives that were loss🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾

  5. 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🤙🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏

  6. The way you took care of your family as a husband and a father.. It is wonderful.. Even god loved you so much that you had to rest peace Kobe and Gianna.. Let god gives your family strength to bear the pain and heal them with abundant peace

  7. Prayers are continuing to sending up for you 🙏🏾 🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾 Vanessa As God Comforts All of you in Gives you strength

  8. Its heartbreaking enough to lose kobe but also 13yr old gianna just breaks you down. Vanessa keep the faith its hard especially for his two last babygirls that will be asking where daddy is😭.

  9. It's never a step forward to be forced to have to give a presentation to the press because your husband is a public idol. Leave them alone. Gheez people.

  10. This is really sad RIP for all of them 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏

  11. I can’t imagine what you are going through, my heart breaks for you and your family. I pray and ask god to give all the families strength. I don’t know you but I want to say you and your family are beautiful and I’m truly sorry about your lost..🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽

  12. Am sorry vanessa for your lose i also miss them and wish kobe was still there to play basket ball and to a husband to u and a father to the girls and also gianna was there to be a daughter and a sister to the girls me and school send our condolences there we miss them love you

  13. Lauded by Hollywood and the media for his last game, the Lakers star — and a slew of fellow male A-listers including NFL stars Ben Roethlisberger and Greg Hardy — exemplifies a double standard about verbal versus physical harm.
    This story first appeared in the May 6 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. To receive the magazine, click here to subscribe.

    Like many, I followed the Kobe Bryant adulation tour that led up to his final game April 13. Unlike many, I was focused on why such homage was being paid to this particular man. Of course, as a Lakers season-ticket holder for the first seven seasons of his career, I'm well aware of what a great player Kobe was. He also was, in my opinion, and that of many others, guilty of rape.

    According to court documents, the facts of the June 30, 2003, incident to which I refer are that Bryant showed up at the Cordillera Spa in Edwards, Colorado, ahead of a knee surgery. A 19-year-old female concierge brought Kobe to his room. He asked her to return later to give him a tour of the hotel. She did so. At the end of the tour, he asked her to enter his room. She did. She said there was flirtation and consensual kissing. When he began groping her, she said, she tried to get away. He grabbed her by the neck, and she feared for her life. He bent her over a chair and removed her panties. She said twice that she begged him to stop but he penetrated her anyway. She left about five minutes later. Her clothes were messed up. She was upset. There was blood on her panties and on his shirt. That blood matched her DNA.

    READ MORE
    Longtime Lakers Fan Dyan Cannon on Kobe Bryant's Life After Retirement: "It's Going to Be Hard"
    She told a friend at the hotel about the incident, and he drove her home. She told her mother. The next day, she went to the police. She was examined in a hospital, and a nurse recorded that she had a bruise on her neck and lacerations on her vaginal wall. The nurse deemed the lacerations to be evidence of rape. Charges were filed, and the case followed a predictable path: Lawyers were hired, the defendant claimed sex was consensual, the victim was portrayed by the defense as a mentally ill slut who just wanted to be famous, another woman who said that the defendant did the same thing to her refused to testify after seeing how the victim was smeared, the victim received a settlement and didn't testify, and the criminal case was dropped.

    Ahead of Kobe's last game, I asked three friends if they weren't uncomfortable with how he was being portrayed as a hero, given what happened in 2003. I received a couple of shrugs and a "That was a long time ago." Well, I guess our society thinks that certain transgressions by celebrities can be forgiven. What's perplexing is the con­trast between which wrongs are and aren't forgivable. Based on what I've read, I believe Kobe most probably raped a woman and still was paid $26 million in 2015 by Nike, Hublot, Panini Authentic, Turkish Airlines and others to endorse their products; Ben Roethlisberger was accused of raping two women and still made more than $35 million for one year as an NFL quarterback; Greg Hardy certainly beat the shit out of his ex-girlfriend and was signed to play defensive end for the Dallas Cowboys; Jameis Winston was sued for the rape of a student at FSU and didn't even break stride to the NFL (having watched the victim's recounting of events, I believe her). Both R. Kelly and Michael Jackson were accused of sexual misconduct, yet the former still is performing and the latter practically has been deified.

    But what isn't forgiven? Killing someone? Nope, Ray Lewis was accused of that, pleaded guilty to a lesser charge and now is an NFL analyst for ESPN. Donte Stallworth killed a pedestrian while driving drunk and played the next year. So violence, especially against women, can be excused. On the other hand, making ugly racist remarks cannot. Donald Sterling is banned from the NBA. Mel Gibson has no career. Anyone seen Michael Richards lately? Interestingly, nasty remarks about gay people can be forgiven. In fact, it seems you can't be elected governor of a Southern state without being a homophobe. Kobe, the role model, called a ref a "faggot." He apologized, paid a fine, and it was like it never happened.

    READ MORE
    Kobe Bryant's Final Lakers Game Gets CAA Premium Experience Treatment 
    I'm not in any way excusing the aforementioned bigotry. Sterling and Gibson got what they deserved. But why is it that saying certain awful things can end a celebrity's career but committing violence doesn't? Doing evil things is unquestionably worse than saying evil things, right? Part of it may be that a recording of one's words can't be denied, but in most rape cases, it comes down to "he said, she said," and in the court of public opinion, the default position seems to always be in favor of what "he said." Again, I'm not talking about women being offended by boorish comments about a pubic hair on a can of Coke, or whatever. I'm talking about someone being forcibly penetrated against her will. And, in most of these notorious cases that are forgiven, there is physical evidence and witnesses and a fact pattern that corroborates the allegation.

    Most celebrities, especially sports stars, have been treated as special since they were young. So why is it more believable that a woman would try to entrap a celebrity by saying consensual sex wasn't consensual and less believable that a celebrity would use his superior size and strength to inflict himself on a woman? The answer is that it isn't more believable. Yet when society makes a judgment about these situations, it finds in favor of the accused. And the only reason this can be true is misogyny: The mind-set that a woman entering a famous man's room, and maybe kissing him, has given license to that man to rape her.

    If we really want to reduce the incidents of violence against women, we need to first accept that in the vast majority of accusations of rape, as studies have shown, the accusers aren't lying. And second, if the facts strongly suggest that a celebrity has committed a rape, we can't just forget what they did and go to their games and buy their jerseys and the sports drinks they promote. Because if you wanted to encourage a culture of rape, the best way to do so would be to endorse and honor the most visible members of society who have been accused of rape.

    Gavin Polone is a producer and director and a regular contributor to The Hollywood Reporter.

  14. I'm not over this, R.I.P to all 9 people

    Really…. blood forced trauma, makes sound like a suicide mission.

    Something just isn't adding up, News people really think we dumb😡😡

  15. At seventeen, a ballers dream,
    The kid could really play,
    From high school to the pros
    He's God's gift to L.A.

    It was clear, we held him dear,
    A cut above the rest,
    His work, his drive, his inner pride.
    He gave his personal best.

    Across the nation, a B-ball Jedi,
    Like Obi-Wan Kenobi,
    There may never come another man,
    As the legend known as, KOBE.

    BertDidIt

  16. Very Nice of her! I would like to think….thinks so also from Above. Love is…timeless….irony is that it takes time to learn That. May we think that Proudness overshadows all.
    God Bless and thnx for sharing with…all…The families Heart is as big as his and theirs.

  17. Can u imagine the sports talk in heaven today? What a tribe must have gathered wings all over and the chit chat thru eternity?🌻

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