Alvin Harrison has lived in Hollister for the last three years and is the director of True Faith Events, which is holding their first-ever walking and running event on Saturday in Hollister.

Two-time Olympic gold medalist Alvin Harrison, a Hollister
resident, wrecked van during school athletic field trip
By Josh Weaver
Sports writer
For updates on this story, visit www.SBCSCORE.com
Gilroy High School track and field head coach Alvin Harrison, a
two-time Olympic gold medalist and resident of Hollister, has been
charged with driving under the influence and is being held in an
Orange County jail after wrecking a van while on a school athletic
field trip.
No students were in the van, GHS Athletic Director Jack Daley
confirmed.
Two-time Olympic gold medalist Alvin Harrison, a Hollister resident, wrecked van during school athletic field trip

By Josh Weaver

Sports writer

For updates on this story, visit www.SBCSCORE.com

Gilroy High School track and field head coach Alvin Harrison, a two-time Olympic gold medalist and resident of Hollister, has been charged with driving under the influence and is being held in an Orange County jail after wrecking a van while on a school athletic field trip.

No students were in the van, GHS Athletic Director Jack Daley confirmed.

Harrison, 37, pleaded not guilty to charges of driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs causing bodily injury to any person other than the driver, driving with a suspended license and driving under the influence while having 0.08 percent or more blood alcohol level, according to Orange County Superior Court records.

Harrison, assistant track coach Ryan Johnson and four GHS sprinters were in Southern California to participate in the esteemed Arcadia Invitational last Friday and Saturday. The accident happened on Thursday night.

The group left Gilroy for the event late last Wednesday. Johnson said he and the sprinters were in the hotel room when Harrison left with the van that evening.

GUSD administrators, including GHS Principal Marco Sanchez, Daley and Assistant Superintendent Joel Herrera, were closed-mouthed about the incident early Wednesday. “Personnel issues usually mean no comment,” Herrera said. “I’ll be happy to get back to you at a later time.”

Later in the day, after numerous phone calls to district officials, Superintendent Debbie Flores acknowledged the incident saying, “obviously drinking on a field trip is wrong and it won’t be tolerated. He has been let go.” Flores stressed that at no time were GHS students in danger. She said the van was not a school district vehicle, but was rented out for the purpose of ferrying the student-athletes to the meet.

Flores added that as soon as the district became aware of the circumstances, Daley traveled down to Arcadia to help supervise the rest of the sprinters’ weekend at the tournament and get them home safely.

Harrison is awaiting an April 19 court appearance at the Harbor Justice Center in Newport Beach and is currently being held at the James A. Musick Facility on $50,000 bail, according to an employee in the records department at the Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

Calls to Harrison’s cell phone go straight to a full voicemail box.

Harrison, who won gold at the 1996 and 2000 Olympics only to have his 1996 medal stripped after admitting to using performance-enhancing drugs, was just four months into his first season at the GHS helm.

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A staff member wrote, edited or posted this article, which may include information provided by one or more third parties.

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