Showing posts with label Jayson WIlliams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jayson WIlliams. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Jayson Williams Sentenced to 18 Months in Prison For Limo Driver Death Cover-up

SOMERVILLE — The 18 months Jayson Williams is likely to spend in prison could help him sort out his life, supporters said Monday after the troubled former NBA star pleaded guilty in the fatal shooting of limousine driver Costas “Gus” Christofi.

Former NBA basketball star Jayson Williams leaves Somerset County Courthouse with his wife, Tanya, after pleading guilty.
AP
Former NBA basketball star Jayson Williams leaves Somerset County Courthouse
with his wife, Tanya, after pleading guilty.

Williams, who pleaded to aggravated assault, “was always wrestling with how to move forward, when he hasn’t resolved the past,” said former New Jersey Nets President Michael Rowe. “This is something where you never forget what you’ve done, but you try to put it behind you.”

Williams Timeline

Significant dates in the life of former New Jersey Nets center Jayson Williams since he played basketball at St. John's University in Queens:

June 27, 1990: Drafted in 1st round (21st overall pick) of the 1990 NBA draft by Phoenix Suns.

Oct. 28, 1990: Traded to Philadelphia 76ers.

Oct. 8, 1992: Traded to New Jersey Nets.

Jan. 27, 1998: Named to NBA All-Star team for the Eastern Conference.

Jan. 14, 1999: Agrees to terms of a six-year guaranteed contract worth $86 million.

April 1, 1999: Suffers career-ending injury when he broke his right tibia and tore the meniscus in his right knee as he tried to avoid a collision with Nets teammate Stephon Marbury.

June 28, 2000: Placed on the retired list by the Nets after a year of failed attempts to return to basketball.

Feb. 14, 2002: Is handling a shotgun at his Hunterdon County mansion when it discharges and kills limousine driver Costas “Gus” Christofi almost instantly.

April 30, 2004: Is found not guilty of three of the most serious charges against him, including aggravated manslaughter. But he is convicted of four charges related to a botched coverup following Christofi's death. The jury hangs on the core charge of reckless manslaughter as the four-month trial concludes.

Oct. 16, 2009: Loses bid to have convictions thrown out because of alleged racial bias in the Hunterdon County prosecutor's office. The latest ruling by Superior Court Judge Edward Coleman in a multi-year line of motions by both sides sets the stage for an expected retrial three months later.

Jan. 11, 2010: Pleads guilty to aggravated assault and agrees to an 18-month prison sentence, with no prospect for early release.

One of Williams’ former coaches, Don Casey, said the agreement was making “the best of a bad, bad situation that was just continuing to linger.”

“The latest episode seals the deal,” Casey said of Williams’ drunken-driving arrest last week in lower Manhattan. “Now, go in [to prison], settle down and begin regrouping. None of that was happening.”

Armon Gilliam, a teammate of Williams with both the Philadelphia 76ers and the Nets, said he hoped the prison sentence would be “the final part of a sad chapter.”

Williams has remained free since shooting Christofi on Feb. 14, 2002 — and also since being convicted of four related post-shooting counts on April 30, 2004.

But the former Nets center — a National Basketball Association All-Star in 1998 — has seen his life take what a prosecutor Monday called “a downward spiral” that has made him “a lightning rod for trouble.”

Williams — who will be sentenced Feb. 23 and serve a minimum of 18 months in prison — saw his father, E.J. die in November. His wife — though in attendance Monday — has filed for divorce. And while the 6-foot-10 Williams earned nearly $100 million in his NBA career, he has fallen behind in child support payments and told a judge he has few liquid assets remaining.

Just last week, Williams was accused of drunken driving when his luxury sport utility vehicle crashed into a tree in lower Manhattan.

“The public has a right to be protected from Mr. Williams, your honor,” Deputy Attorney General Steven Farman said in an unsuccessful bid to have Williams’ $250,000 bail revoked immediately. “He’s wild and irresponsible.”

Many of Williams’ friends and advisers had been urging Williams to take the plea deal, rather than risk a conviction for reckless manslaughter.

Casey said he hoped for a “new incarnation” of Williams to emerge once he leaves prison — perhaps before the end of 2011, though he could serve as much as 3½ additional years for the post-shooting counts.

Gilliam said that consolation of the prison sentence for Williams is that he would have “plenty of time for the introspection he needs to be prepared for the next phase of his life.”

Rowe also is hopeful that Monday will mark the start of a turnaround for Williams.

“He has to close this chapter and pay his debt,” Rowe said. “And when he gets out, hopefully he can — by his experience — teach people how not to caught up the way he did.”

A sad irony is that the victim, Christofi, already had rebounded from his own troubled past when he died on Feb. 14, 2002, according to friends and family.

The limo driver had served time in prison in the 1970s and overcame drug addiction during the decade before he was shot. Christofi — 55 at the time of his death — later worked as a drug counselor and was described by his employer during the trial as among his most reliable workers.

Christofi was hired to take some of Williams’ friends to a Harlem Globetrotters game in Lehigh, Pa., and he drove several of them back to Williams’ Hunterdon County estate after a late-night dinner. Williams’ friends invited Christofi to come inside, and Williams arrived a little later.

Williams almost immediately took a Browning Citori, a double-barreled, 12-gauge shotgun, from a gun rack in the master suite that contained six weapons — four of which were loaded, according to police. In response to questioning by his attorney, Joseph Hayden, Williams admitted Monday that he had not checked to see whether the safety mechanism was engaged.

Asked if he made sure the gun was not loaded, Williams replied, “I only saw the top barrel — I didn’t check the bottom barrel.” Williams added that he “didn’t look where the muzzle of the gun was pointing” before snapping the gun closed with one hand.

Video: Jayson Williams pleads guilty to aggravated assault in limo driver's death






Tuesday, January 5, 2010

UPDATE: Ex-Nets Star Jayson Williams Car Crash Injuries 'Minor' Say NYPD

AP Photo/Keith Muccilli/Jayson Williams was hospitalized after his SUV struck a tree.

by Alicia Cruz
The black Urban Times

From the looks of Jayson William's banged up Mercedes Benz SUV, one might assume his injuries from this morning's crash off the FDR Drive to be life threatening. New York Police officials say though the 41-year-old troubled hoopster suffered neck and facial injuries during the early morning crash, his injuries are minor.

They added that when the star is released from Bellevue Hospital, he will be arrested for driving while intoxicated.

Williams, who refused a Breathalyzer test on the scene, apparently drove north on the FDR Drive and crashed into a tree on 18th Street near the E. 20th St. and Ave. C exit, NYPD said.

The first officers to arrive at the scene say they found an injured Williams sitting in the passenger seat of his vehicle, but witnesses say they saw Williams in the driver's seat and alone when the crash occurred.

Photo Hagen for Daily News/Jayson Williams banged up SUV

Medical personnel at Bellevue drew blood from Williams and NYPD investigators scrambled to obtain a warrant in order to test the blood for alcohol and any other substances that may have impaired his driving.

The crash and potential arrest for driving while intoxicated will only increase the former St. John's University player's legal woes.

Williams was about to face retrial next week in the fatal shooting of his limo driver, Costas Christofi, at the star's palatial New Jersey estate in 2002.

Police say Williams was playing with a shotgun when it went off and killed the driver and William's attempted to hide the incident. A higher court ruled prosecutors could retry Williams on a reckless manslaughter charge that could send him to prison.

Video courtesy of myfoxny






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Thursday, November 19, 2009

Plea deal expected in Jayson Williams' retrial

By Jennifer Golson/The Star-Ledger

HUNTERDON COUNTY - Former NBA star Jayson Williams is expected to appear in court Friday for a plea deal in the 2002 death of a limousine driver in Hunterdon County, according to people with knowledge of the case.

Williams, 41, was facing retrial for reckless manslaughter for shooting Costas "Gus" Christofi, 55, on Feb. 14, 2002, at the estate Williams owned in Alexandria Township.

Barring any last-minute developments, the plea hearing is scheduled for tomorrow before Superior Court Judge Edward Coleman in Somerville, sources said late last night.

Williams1.JPGJayson Williams, seen here during a hearing to determine if racial bias tainted his original trial in 2004, is expected to appear Friday to accept terms of a plea deal in connection with the 2002 shooting death of driver Costas ''Gus'' Christofi.

The sources asked to remain anonymous, because they are not authorized to speak about the case.

Details of the plea deal could not be obtained last night, but the development comes as the state Attorney General’s Office prepares to take over the case at the request of Hunterdon County Prosecutor J. Patrick Barnes.

Full coverage of the Jayson Williams' trial

The trial was scheduled to begin in January.

Williams has insisted Christofi’s death was an accident, but the state has accused him of recklessly handling a gun that fired, killing Christofi.

He first went to trial in 2004, and jurors acquitted him of the most serious offense, aggravated manslaughter.

They convicted him of the charges related to the attempted cover-up, and reckless manslaughter was the only charge on which they could not agree.

The development also comes shortly after the loss of his father, Elijah Joshua "E.J." Williams, who died Nov. 10 of complications from several strokes.

Williams buried his father in South Carolina on Saturday, said longtime friend Akhtar Farzaie.

"He’s still at a point where he’s dealing with the loss of his father, who was his best friend," Farzaie said.

Previous coverage:

Oct. 16, 2009 - Despite racial slur, judge refuses to toss Jayson Williams' convictions

Oct. 14, 2009 - N.J. Attorney General's Office agrees to take over Jayson Williams prosecution

May 2004 - Williams to be re-tried on key charges

May 2004 - Ex-Net convicted of cover-up in limo driver death, acquitted of aggravated manslaughter charge

Monday, April 27, 2009

Ex-Nets Star Jayson Williams Suicidal, Violent at Manhattan Hotel

BY Alison Gendar, Edgar Sandoval and Dave Goldiner
Cops tasered ex-NBA star Jayson Williams on Monday after the troubled hoopster freaked out in a violent, suicidal rage in a luxury Manhattan hotel, police sources said.
The mercurial New Jersey Nets center, who faces a retrial for shooting his chauffeur in 2002, was rushed to St. Vincent's Hospital Manhattan in handcuffs after cops found suicide notes and empty pill bottles littering his 15th-floor room, sources said.
"Tell my mother that I love her," Williams, 41, wrote in one panicked scribble, police sources said.
Williams, who is going through a nasty divorce, was in a spacious room at the Hilton Embassy Suites in Battery Park City.
The 6-foot-10 former All-Star called his mother around 1 a.m. Things quickly went downhill as he became distraught and apparently started downing sleeping pills and anti-depressants.
A worried woman called cops around 4a.m., possibly from the room. Police smashed down the door to get inside.
The towering, 325-pound star fought back and police had to use the stun guns to subdue him. It took two sets of handcuffs to restrain him, cops said.
"He was barricaded, drinking, taking pills. He was overwhelmed," a police source said. "It all came crashing down."
Cops found several suicide notes, including a message scrawled on the wall.
Williams was distraught over his divorce, his parents' illnesses and his impending retrial in the chauffeur-shooting case, they said.
He had five prescriptions in his room, all made out to him, along with a hypodermic needle and a vial of human growth hormone, police sources said.
Despite the drama, a few hours later, Williams' manager insisted the troubled ex-athlete was on the mend. He was in stable condition and has not been charged in the fracas.
Full story



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