FILE - In this Dec. 27, 2010, file photo, New Orleans Saints defensive end Will Smith (91) celebrates a 17-14 win over the Atlanta Falcons in an NFL football game in Atlanta. Smith was fatally shot after a traffic accident in New Orleans. |
NEW ORLEANS
(AP) -- Former New Orleans Saints player Will Smith was shot and
killed in a case of road rage by a man who had rear-ended his car,
police said Sunday.
Smith was beloved by fans
for his role in bringing a Super Bowl championship to New Orleans in
2009, though the defensive captain also found himself at the center of
the NFL's bounty probe in 2012.
Smith's
slaying rippled across the sports world, with figures from NBA star
LeBron James to NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell offering their
condolences. James said on Twitter: "So sad man. Good dude he was man!"
There
was no indication Smith, 34, knew 28-year-old Cordell Hayes before the
deadly confrontation, or that anything except the car wreck led to the
shooting. Hayes waited for police to arrive after the shooting and was
arrested on a charge of second-degree murder. Police Superintendent
Michael Harrison would not say whether Hayes claimed self-defense,
citing the ongoing investigation.
Harrison
said the former defensive end had dined just hours before the Saturday
night crash with a police officer who had once been sued by Hayes, whose
father was shot and killed by police in 2005. However, it was not clear
if that played any role in the confrontation.
Hayes'
Humvee H2 rear-ended Smith's Mercedes G63 about 11:30 p.m. Saturday in
the upscale Lower Garden District, pushing it into a Chevrolet Impala
driven by two of Smith's acquaintances. The two argued, and Hayes shot
both Smith and Smith's wife, Racquel, police said. She was wounded in
the leg and taken to a hospital.
The Smith
family said in a statement that they were thankful for the outpouring of
support but requested privacy as the family grieves for a "devoted
husband, father and friend." Will and Racquel Smith have three children.
The
couple had been at the French Quarter festival, an event that features
local music and food, in the hours before the shooting. He posted a
photo of himself and his wife on Twitter and Instagram with the caption:
"Having a blast at the #fqf2016 @ French Quarter Fest."
Online
court records show Hayes pleaded guilty in 2014 to one count each of
possessing an illegal weapon and possessing drug paraphernalia.
He
sued the New Orleans Police Department and six officers after police
killed his father in 2005. The former officer who dined with Smith,
William Ceravolo, was not present at the time of the crash, police
spokesman Tyler Gamble said.
Police settled
the lawsuit in 2011. The settlement is confidential, said attorney Ike
Spears, who represented Hayes in that suit.
Smith,
a native of Queens, New York, played for Ohio State's 2002 national
championship team and graduated in 2005 with a degree in criminology.
Ohio
State athletics has "lost one of its best" - someone who led a
defensive line that powered the team to the championship, the school
said in a statement.
Smith was a first-round
draft choice by New Orleans in 2004. He led the Saints with a
career-high 13 sacks in 2009, when the club won its only Super Bowl.
Smith's 67 ½ career sacks rank fourth in Saints history.
He
last played in an NFL regular season game in 2012. During the 2013
preseason, a knee injury forced him onto injured reserve. He was signed
in the 2014 offseason by New England but did not make the Patriots'
regular season roster.
Smith was defensive
captain for much of his career, but it was also that leadership role
that landed him at the center of the NFL's bounty probe in 2012. The
league concluded that Smith and fellow defensive captain Jonathan Vilma
helped run a locker-room pool that paid cash bonuses for heavy and even
injurious hits.
Smith was initially suspended
four games but, with three other players, successfully appealed their
suspensions and were never compelled to miss games, even as Saints coach
Sean Payton was suspended the entire 2012 season.
A
year earlier, however, Smith served a two-game suspension that stemmed
from findings in 2008 that he and several other NFL players used a
weight-loss product called StarCaps, which contained a diuretic banned
by the league because it was known to mask steroid use. That suspension
was enforced after legal challenges spanning several seasons.
Off
the field, Smith took an active role in trying to improve children's
lives, establishing a foundation called, Where There's A Will, There's A
Way. Its stated mission is "to motivate, educate and provide
opportunities for women and children."
"The
Saints family is hurting and devastated as it has lost a member too
young and too soon," Saints owner Tom Benson said in a statement.
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