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Some in the crowd got a little too rowdy, including a group that was shut out of the celebration when the Coliseum filled to capacity. Dozens of people who tried to enter by climbing over a ticket booth were turned back by police on horseback and in riot gear. Some officers fired beanbags into the crowd.
In all, 15 people were arrested, police said. Several cases of heat exhaustion were the only injuries reported.
Police Chief William J. Bratton said at least 1,700 officers, some in plainclothes, kept watch on the crowd.
Fan Michael Sims arrived before dawn with his brother, sister, niece and nephews to ensure they would get seats inside the Coliseum.
"Who would miss this? This is magical," said the 45-year-old Sims, who has been cheering the Lakers since the days of Johnson and Abdul-Jabbar.
In the days before the event, much was made of its estimated $2 million cost, with critics complaining that a city a half-billion dollars in debt and facing layoffs could not afford the celebration.
But private donors joined the team and the owners of Staples Center to underwrite most of the cost. It was the first of at the four Laker victory parades this decade to be privately funded.
[Associated Press;
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