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Unwed she-boon with 3 sprogs murders NFL meal ticket. Welfarealert sent.
On Dec 17, 1:21*pm, jack@yomomma. (Nobama) wrote:
On 17 Dec 2009 20:13:26 -0000, "Black Society News" wrote: The she-boon will go to prison after an expensive tax-payer paid trial, and the sprogs will wind up on welfare. *Typical negro behavior. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/18/sp...l/18henry.html Chris Henry, the Cincinnati Bengals receiver whose playing career was marred by numerous brushes with the law, died Thursday morning after he fell from the back of a moving pickup truck in Charlotte, N.C., Wednesday afternoon, the police said. He was 26. Henry had reportedly been in North Carolina in part to plan his wedding while on injured reserve with a broken arm. But the Charlotte-Mecklenburg police have described Henry’s accident as the result of a domestic dispute with his fiancée, who was identified by The Associated Press as Loleini Tonga. Her family lives in Charlotte. Henry was taken to the hospital Wednesday after being found on a residential road. Henry was remembered as a soft-spoken, tremendously talented player who died just as he seemed to be emerging from several difficult years. “He was good at what he did as a player, he was excellent,” Mike Brown, the owner of the Bengals, said at a news conference Thursday morning. “He was a teammate to our players, a friend to almost all of us in the building. We knew him in a different way than his public persona. We liked him. He had worked through troubles in his life and had finally seemingly reached the point where everything was going to blossom and he was going to have the future we all wanted for him and he wanted for himself.” The police said the dispute began at a house about a half-mile from the accident scene. The A.P. reported that the house was owned by the Tonga family. Henry jumped into the bed of the pickup truck as his fiancée was driving away, and at some point Henry “came out of the back of the vehicle,” the police said, although it was not clear how. On Thursday afternoon the police released two 911 tapes. On the first, a woman, who was not identified, said she was driving behind a yellow pickup truck. “It’s got a black man on it with no shirt on, and he’s got his arm in a cast and black pants on,” she told a dispatcher. “He’s beating on the back of this truck window.” She continued: “I don’t know if he’s trying to break in or something. It just looks crazy. It’s a girl driving it.” A minute later, a man, also unidentified, called 911 to say he saw a man “laying in the road” and “definitely unconscious.” Henry’s off-the-field behavior earned him a reputation as a troubled player who in recent months appeared to be trying to straighten himself out. The Bengals drafted him in the third round of the 2005 N.F.L. draft. His speed made him an attractive prospect out of West Virginia University despite considerable concerns about his behavior, which included an ejection from a game. “Chris was a big part of our success during his time here,” West Virginia Coach Bill Stewart, an assistant coach when Henry played there, said in a statement released by the team. “For me, he was a real joy to be around on a daily basis. He always came to work and loved to play football.” Rich Rodriguez, the Michigan head coach who was West Virginia’s coach in Henry’s playing days there, said in a statement, “I have many fond memories of our three years together and will remember those forever.” Once in the N.F.L., Henry was arrested several times after incidents involving driving under the influence, marijuana possession and assault, and he served multiple suspensions for violating the league’s personal-conduct policy. He served jail time for drinking in a hotel room with under-age girls. After serving an eight-game suspension in 2007 for violating the league’s personal-conduct policy, he was arrested in April 2008, his fifth arrest in 28 months. He was waived by the Bengals. But four months later, Brown, who has a history of reaching out to troubled players, re-signed Henry over the objections of Coach Marvin Lewis. After Henry served a four-game suspension for misconduct, he rejoined the team. Lewis met with Henry, his fiancée and children then. At the time of his death, Henry and Tonga were raising three children, The A.P. reported. Lewis said Henry had become a beacon of hope for others who hoped to put troubles behind them. In eight games this season before breaking his arm Nov. 8 against the Baltimore Ravens, he had 12 receptions for 236 yards and 2 touchdowns. “He had troubles, and some of them were made more of than I think they actually were,” Brown said. “Yes, it was challenging at times with him. But he was someone we liked. It’s a terrible tragedy that just at a time he was running to daylight, his life was snuffed out.” Take the homie from da hood, make him a millionaire, nothing changes. And yet for decades we heard that socioeconomic inequities were the reason for their evil behavior. Another left-wing myth put to rest.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Will the deceased make the Pantheon of Black Athletes? visit: http://www.newnation.org/ New Nation open: "sports" climber |
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