A 21-year-old man who intentionally vomited on a spectator
and his 11-year-old daughter at a Philadelphia Phillies game
has been sentenced to up to three months in jail and
community service, which the judge suggested be fulfilled by
cleaning ballpark toilets and trash.
Matthew Clemmens, of Cherry Hill, New Jersey, was taken into
custody immediately after Family Court Judge Kevin Dougherty
imposed the sentence, and several family members burst into
sobs as he was handcuffed.
The spectator Clemmens vomited on and punched, Michael
Vangelo, of Easton, said his daughter Mikayla was still
traumatised.
"What really bothers me about the incident is that Mikayla
refuses to talk about it," he testified.
The family has received offers from the team and complete
strangers for tickets to future games, but "she does not want
to go," said Vangelo, an Easton police captain.
He said he also has not returned to Citizens Bank Park since
the assault.
Clemmens pleaded guilty in May to charges of assault,
harassment and disorderly conduct. He admitted he stuck his
fingers down his throat and vomited on Vangelo and Mikayla at
a Phillies-Nationals game on April 14.
Clemmens was sentenced to one to three months in jail, two
years of probation and 50 hours of community service, which
Dougherty suggested be served at Citizens Bank Park.
The maximum penalty was two years in jail. Public defender
Richard Hark asked for probation.
Clemmens sobbed as he read from a statement expressing
remorse for his actions.
"I'm working every day to clear this black mark from me and
my family," Clemmens said. "Give me the opportunity to show
you who I am and not who I was that one afternoon."
His parents, acquaintances and grandfather - who took a
27-hour train ride from Florida to attend the sentencing -
testified that he was a good person who volunteers in his
community and made one uncharacteristically bad mistake.
Dougherty said he believed the defendant's apology was
"feigned."
"Superficially you present yourself one way, but outside of
the home you present yourself another way," Dougherty said,
calling Clemmens a "mean-spirited and vulgar" young man who
humiliated his family and tarnished the city's reputation.
Clemmens and his friend were cursing and heckling the Vangelo
family from the first inning. Vangelo's 15-year-old daughter
asked them to stop the profanity around her younger sister,
prompting more heckling and cursing.
The family was doused with beer when they rose to cheer a
Phillies home run, and Vangelo eventually complained to
security that Clemmens' friend was spitting, which hit his
younger daughter's jacket and seat.
After the friend was ejected, Clemmens was sitting alone when
he answered his cell phone and said: "I need to do what I
need to do. I'm going to get sick," prosecutors said.
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