Hawaii
Ex-Hawaii star tackle and record holder Levi Stanley dies at 73 | Honolulu Star-Advertiser
Former University of Hawaii football teammates remembered Levi Stanley as a humble, popular and dynamic defensive lineman.
Stanley, who held the Rainbow Warriors’ record for career tackles for 35 years through 2008, died on Sunday at Kuakini Medical Center, according to friends and family. He was 73.
“Levi was a very tenacious ballplayer,” said Cliff Laboy, who teamed with Stanley on the defensive line in the early 1970s. “He was very serious. He took nothing for granted. Very strong, physically fit. He spent a lot of time in the gym training and preparing for battle.”
Defensive coordinator Larry Price developed a relentless D-line of Laboy at left end, Stanley at left tackle, Paul Lee at right tackle and Simeon Alo at right end. Pat Richardson succeeded Alo.
“The defensive line kept coming and coming (after ball-carriers and quarterbacks),” Richardson recalled.
In 1973, the Warriors, who entered as 50-point underdogs, upset Washington 10-7 in Seattle. Stanley, as usual, led the defensive charge.
Don’t miss out on what’s happening!
Stay in touch with breaking news, as it happens, conveniently in your email inbox. It’s FREE!
“He was a local hero,” said former UH head coach June Jones, who was a backup quarterback in 1973. “In the 1970s, Levi captivated everybody, including the University of Washington in that victory up there.”
Stanley, who grew up in Waianae, was fiercely loyal to his West-side roots.
“He was very proud to be from Waianae,” Jones said. “He was a competitor, an unbelievable competitor. He represented what Larry Price wanted in Hawaii football.”
Stanley also attracted a loyal following. “Levi’s Kanaka Army” would gather on the Diamond Head side of Honolulu Stadium.
“The Kanaka Army would show up at the old Termite Palace, under the scoreboard, wearing No. 74 (replica shirts),” Richardson said. “Levi never bragged about himself. He was such a good guy, a humble, humble, humble Hawaiian.”
Former UH center David “Mad Dog” Mutter said: “After a game, he would spend a half-hour at the 50-yard line, signing autographs, giving away his chinstrap, and spending time with the kids. … He was a good all-around guy, but he didn’t fool around when it came to the game of football. He was all business.”
Retired columnist Ferd Lewis wrote in 2008: “Asked by charity workers what they wished for one Christmas, a group of underprivileged kids requested not gifts or a visit by Santa Claus, but the opportunity to meet Stanley.”
Mutter said Stanley was noted for a swim move and helmet slap — a legal maneuver back in the day — to navigate past blockers.
“He had a fantastic head slap,” said Mutter, even when Stanley played a game despite a compound fracture in his right arm. … He was one of the best, if not the best, player I was across from.”
During his senior season in 1973, Stanley set the UH career record with 366 tackles. (Linebacker Solomon Elimimian broke that record in 2008.)
Stanley played two seasons with the Hawaiians of the World Football League. His signing “bonus” was a new purple Porsche. He also spent time with the San Francisco 49ers.
Stanley was inducted into the UH Circle of Honor in 1995.
After retiring, he worked as a stevedore. He is survived by his wife, Karen, and their daughter.
—
More UH football coverage
Hawaii
Man killed while changing tire after crash in South Kohala
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – Hawaiʻi Island police are investigating a traffic collision that claimed the life of a 59-year-old Waimea man on Sunday afternoon.
At 1:22 p.m., South Kohala patrol officers responded to the collision and determined that a black 2008 BMW sedan was traveling eastbound on Kawaihae Road when it veered onto the south shoulder and collided with a parked, unoccupied gold 2004 Toyota Camry sedan that was facing east on the shoulder.
Police identified the victim as 59-year-old Sione Tilini of Waimea.
At the time of the collision, three individuals were outside the Toyota Camry on the passenger side of the vehicle, changing a front passenger-side tire.
Tilini is believed to have been positioned between and partially underneath the passenger-side wheels of the Toyota when the collision occurred. The impact caused the Toyota to fall onto him.
Tilini was transported to Queen’s North Hawaiʻi Community Hospital, where he was later pronounced dead at 2:47 p.m.
Two additional individuals, a 19-year-old man and an 11-year-old boy, sustained minor injuries after being struck when the parked vehicle was pushed forward during the collision.
Both were transported to Queen’s North Hawaiʻi Community Hospital for treatment and later released.
The driver and sole occupant of the BMW, a 22-year-old Waimea man, was transported to Queen’s North Hawaiʻi Community Hospital and remains in critical condition.
The BMW driver was arrested on suspicion of negligent homicide, negligent injury, driving without a license, no motor vehicle insurance, and operating a vehicle under the influence of an intoxicant.
The Hawaiʻi Police Department’s Area II Traffic Enforcement Unit has initiated a negligent homicide investigation.
Police ask anyone who witnessed the collision or has information relevant to the investigation to contact Officer Dayson Taniguchi at dayson.taniguchi@hawaiipolice.gov or at (808) 326-4646, ext. 229.
This was the fourth traffic fatality within five days and the ninth traffic fatality on Hawaiʻi Island in 2026, compared with 12 at the same time last year.
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Hawaii
County approval sought for festival that has irritated neighbors – West Hawaii Today
Hawaii
Tourist yells ‘I’m rich’ after beachgoers beg him to stop attacking endangered seal — before he’s detained
A tourist who threw a huge rock at an endangered Hawaiian monk seal in Maui boasted that he didn’t care about the consequences because he’s “rich” — before he was detained over the attack.
The man was filmed lifting a large rock from a beach and throwing it towards an endangered seal as it swam off the Lahaina shoreline last Tuesday, narrowly missing the animal’s head.
Kaylee Schnitzer, who filmed the video, can be heard yelling at the man: “What are you doing? Why would you throw a rock at it?”
She later told KHON 2: “We told him that we called the cops, and he was like, ‘I don’t care. Fine me, I’m rich.’ He said that, and he kept walking.”
The Division of Conservation and Resources Enforcement’s Maui Branch dispatched officers to the beach, where they detained the suspect. Hawaii’s Department of Land and Natural Resources said it will not be share the suspect’s identity as he has not been criminally charged at this time. He is understood to be a 37-year-old man from Seattle, Washington.
A viral video captured a tourist throwing a large rock at an endangered monk seal in Hawaii (KHON2)
Hawaiian monk seals are among the most endangered marine mammals in the world. Harassing, injuring or killing one is against both state and federal law, and violators may face fines or criminal penalties. The horrifying incident sparked online outrage and Schnitzer’s video went viral.
The seal, named “Lani,” is beloved by many residents in the area after returning to Lahaina following the 2023 wildfires. Maui Mayor Richard Bissen noted in an Instagram post that both members of his team and locals have “watched over and deeply cared for” Lani since her return.
“Let me be clear, this is not the kind of visitor we welcome on Maui,” Bissen said. “We welcome respectful visitors that understand that our cultural environment and wildlife must be treated with care and aloha. Behavior like this will not be tolerated.”
Monk seals are one of the most endangered marine mammals in the world (Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources)
State officials said the suspect was questioned by authorities and later released after he requested legal counsel.
The Department of Land and Natural Resources said it is investigating the incident and will turn over the findings to NOAA’s Office of Law Enforcement for possible federal action. The Independent has contacted the department for more information.
During a news conference on Wednesday, the Division of Conservation and Resources Enforcement Chief Jason Redulla said officials have not confirmed whether the seal was harmed by the rock.
Police reminded the public to avoid interactions with the protected species and report harmful behavior to authorities.
-
Arkansas4 minutes agoSax star Merlon Devine joins Lupus Foundation of Arkansas to jazz up awareness month
-
California11 minutes agoGOP California governor candidates to face off at Clovis forum ahead of primary
-
Colorado17 minutes agoCoworking firm Industrious takes former WeWork space in Denver
-
Connecticut22 minutes agoNew Haven man found with ‘Super Mario’ meth pills to serve federal prison time
-
Delaware28 minutes agoWho governs matters: Why school board elections deserve your attention
-
Florida35 minutes agoSouth Florida officers sue Ben Affleck and Matt Damon, claiming details in ‘The Rip’ are too real
-
Georgia40 minutes agoGeorgia Democrats seek answers from Justice Department over Fulton election worker subpoena
-
Hawaii47 minutes agoMan killed while changing tire after crash in South Kohala