Chris Henry injured in domestic dispute

vinnie

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CHARLOTTE, NC (WBTV) - Police are investigating a domestic situation in which NFL wide receiver Chris Henry was critically injured in northwest Charlotte Wednesday afternoon.

The Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department received a call around noon about a person who was injured at 1135 Oakdale Road. That person was later identified as Chris Henry who is wide receiver for the Cincinnati Bengals.

When police officers arrived, they found Henry in the middle of the road suffering from life-threatening injuries. He was taken to Carolinas Medical Center where he is being treated for his injuries.

The CMPD said Henry was involved in a domestic situation at 840 Peachtree Road. Police said Henry's fianc? got into a pickup truck and drove away from the home.

As she was driving away, police said Henry jumped into the bed of the truck.

A short time later, Henry came out of the back of the truck and was injured.
 

bleedingpurple

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Where it is real F ing COLD
Apparently his death reports are a hoax at this time but from what I am reading the news is not good as he is on life support. This could very well be the end of a life of someone who has constantly made poor decisions.
 

hedgehog

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he died this morning :sadwave:

the Bengals have had their share of tragedy this year.

sad story
 

kegray1

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Chris Henry is a guy that never took advantage of the situation he had.
This guy has been in trouble with somebody or up to no good his entire life.
The sad thing is he leaves behind 3 kids for doing something very stupid.
I mean nothing good was going to happen by getting in the back of that truck. If she had pulled over then we have no idea what might of happened.
Sometimes you should just walk away and live to fight another day.
Nobody is clear what really happened at Tiger's house but it kind of appears he walked away from a bad situation.
I guess that Stanford education taught him something.

It is sad to see somebody die of such a silly thing.
 

fletcher

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Henry has not been in trouble his whole life, fact he has been a person who has worked with troubled kids and special needs children the last few years, also was a quite home guy not in spot light type guy as people wanted to make him out to be, very good father, had some early problems being around wrong people which many young nfl players seem to find , had only late season problem his last year at wvu, also Rich acted like a dick towards him which made things look lot worse they they were, well Rich is no-one to live in a glass house, check his problems and people he has been around his last year at wvu and his agent.

Henry had showed he turned his life around he didnot say it he showed it , he ran and worked free football camps in wv, oh and la with other nfl, ex nfl player and college coaches from wvu and other teams. he is far from the likes of Adam(pacman) Jones. If you did not know the guy or about him , then don't judge by all you might of heard or read in a paper, the web or tv&radio. Hell lot of pro players have done much worse then he ever did. i can fill the page with names.

Bottom line is he made some mistakes poor choices at times, but was always a good person (not saying he did not have some run ins) but a good person who helped others when ask and when not, loved to work with special needs children and all children, even in college. lot more to the man then some give him credit for.
 

THE KOD

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Police: Bengals' Henry dies day after dispute
Dec 17 01:15 PM US/Eastern
By MIKE CRANSTON
AP Sports Writer

Police Release 911 Call From Incident That Killed Chris Henry

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Cincinnati Bengals receiver Chris Henry died Thursday, a day after falling out of the back of a pickup truck during what police said was a domestic dispute with his fiancee.
Charlotte-Mecklenburg police said Henry died at 6:36 a.m. Henry was 26.

"We knew him in a different way than his public persona," Bengals owner Mike Brown said of the player who was suspended five times during his career. "He had worked through the 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. It's painful to us. We feel it in our hearts, and we will miss him."

Police spokeswoman Rosalyn Harrington said homicide detectives have been assigned to the case but had no further information.

Henry was rushed to the hospital Wednesday after being found on a residential road. Police said the dispute began at a home about a half-mile away, and Henry jumped into the bed of the pickup truck as his fiancee was driving away from the residence.

Police said at some point when she was driving, Henry "came out of the back of the vehicle." Police have not released the 911 tapes, and Harrington wouldn't say if the woman, whom police would not identify, was present at the scene when police arrived.

Henry is engaged to Loleini Tonga, and the couple has been raising three children. Tonga's MySpace page identifies herself as "Mrs. C. Henry" and has a picture of her next to a person who appears to be Henry. She also has a post from Tuesday talking about buying wedding rings. A neighbor said Wednesday that the Tonga family owns the home where police say the incident began. Charlotte is home to his fiancee's parents.

"We ask that you keep Chris' family?especially the young children he leaves behind?in your prayers," Henry's agent, Andy Simms of PlayersRep Sports said in a statement. "It is tragic when a life is taken so young. He was a man just realizing his potential, not just in football, but in life."

Authorities have not announced the cause of death. Mecklenburg County medical examiner investigator Carol Cormier said they were expecting to receive the body later Thursday.

The Bengals will wear a helmet sticker Sunday against San Diego to remember Henry.

When the players received word Henry had died, quarterback Carson Palmer called them together in the locker room and said they should dedicate the game and rest of the season to Henry and the wife of defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer, who died unexpectedly during the season.

Henry was away from the Bengals after breaking his left forearm during a win over Baltimore on Nov. 8. He had surgery and was placed on season-ending injured reserve following the game.

"We are greatly saddened by today's tragic news about the loss of Chris Henry," NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said. "Our thoughts and prayers go out to Chris' family, including his Bengals family. We have been in contact with the Bengals to offer our support through this difficult time.

"I ask you to keep Chris Henry and his family in your thoughts today."

Throughout his career, his temper and poor decisions got him in trouble.

He was ejected from a game and suspended for another while at West Virginia, where former coach Rich Rodriguez told Henry that he was an embarrassment to himself and the program. His reputation was already costing him?the Bengals were the only NFL team to bring him in for a pre-draft visit in 2005.

They found that his demeanor didn't match his reputation. Henry was shy and spoke in a quiet voice. They warned him that he had to stay in control if he was going to stay in the NFL. Then, they picked him in the third round.

In a sense, it was already a second chance.

"I'm worth the chance," Henry said, when he showed up the following weekend for a rookie minicamp. "I'm just happy they took me."

Henry become a vital part of the offense as a rookie, helping the Bengals reach the playoffs in 2005 with his ability to run past defenders to grab long passes. In the final month of the season, he also showed his other side, getting arrested for marijuana possession. After a playoff loss to Pittsburgh, he was arrested on a gun charge in Florida.

Henry and former Tennessee cornerback Adam "Pacman" Jones became the league's two most trouble-bound players. Commissioner Roger Goodell suspended both in 2007?Jones for a full season, Henry for half of it?as part of a toughening of the league's conduct policy.

When Henry was arrested for a fifth time following that season on an assault charge, the Bengals decided they'd had enough. At his arraignment on April 3, 2008, Municipal Court Judge Bernie Bouchard called Henry "a one-man crime wave." He was released by the Bengals the same day.

It was a jolt to Henry, who had dreamed of an NFL career since high school, when he got the NFL logo tattooed on the back of his right hand. No team showed an interest in bringing him back. His career seemed finished.

Then, Brown?who refers to himself as "a redeemer"?changed his mind and gave him another chance.

"If you only knew him by hearsay, you'd think he's some kind of ogre," Brown said, during the Bengals' appearance on HBO's "Hard Knocks" series this summer. "It's not true. He's a good person. When you see him up close, you'll find that you'll like him. He'll be a soft-spoken, pleasant person."

This time, Henry seemed determined to stay out of trouble. After only 19 catches and two touchdowns in 12 games in the 2008 season, he set about making himself a topflight receiver again. He got into top shape and worked out with teammates in the offseason, showing more resolve than at any point in his career.

Henry also changed his personal life, spending more time with his fiancee and the three children they are raising. Teammates noticed a pronounced change in his demeanor.

"He's a great kid with a great heart," quarterback Carson Palmer said as training camp started. "He's changed his life around. He ran into some trouble, made some bad decisions, and realized that. He's sorry for them, apologized for them, and has done everything he can to make himself a better person. I'm just proud of him."

Before the 2009 season, Henry got a new tattoo that matched his new outlook. Below his left ear, in flowing one-inch script, was the world "Blessed."

"I kind of felt like I dug myself out of the hole and started doing the right things," Henry said in an interview with The Associated Press as training camp opened. "People say, 'How you feeling now Chris? You doing all right?' I just tell them I'm blessed. That's why I got it."

He caught a touchdown pass in each of Cincinnati's four preseason games. A thigh injury slowed him early in the season, and he had 12 catches for 236 yards?his 19.7-yard average per catch leads the team?when he broke his left arm during a win over Baltimore on Nov. 22, ending his season.

"He was doing everything right," receiver Chad Ochocinco said. "My grandma always says you never question the man upstairs on decisions he makes. Everyone makes mistakes, but I don't see how Chris was supposed to go already, especially when he was on the right path. Other than that, he's going to be missed."
..................................................................


Well he is gone.

What a total waste.

you get in a fight with your gf, jump in the back of a truck as she veers away, fall out and you die.

It just shouldnt end that way.:sadwave:

this is a crazy world we live in.
 

kegray1

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Well it sounds like he was turning life around,but the public perception of the guy will always be defined as this:

When Henry was arrested for a fifth time following that season on an assault charge, the Bengals decided they'd had enough. At his arraignment on April 3, 2008, Municipal Court Judge Bernie Bouchard called Henry "a one-man crime wave."
 

gardenweasel

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might be a homicide investigation...i bet they`re thinking that the g.f. was driving wildly trying to dislodge henry from the cab...
 

THE KOD

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Henry's death hits home for lifelong friend

Dec 18, 2009 12:41 PM EDT

By the age of five, Shane Shelley found himself a frequent guest in the home of his best friend, Chris Henry. They lived a couple of blocks apart, about 20 miles southeast of New Orleans, in a town called Belle Chasse. ?Mixed neighborhood,? Shelley told me over the phone, speaking from the deck of his oyster boat on Thursday afternoon.
Shelley and Henry as eighth graders in 1998.
Shane Shelley

Shelley remembers that Henry?s mom, whom he still calls ?Miss Carolyn,? was usually out working, as she had three sons to feed, and that Chris? grandmother cooked their breakfasts to order. ?Eggs, grits, sausage,? he says. ?Anything we wanted.?

She was a wonderful grandma, who once splurged on a pair of $125 Tracy McGrady sneakers for Chris. The boys were in middle school high when she passed. ?I was the only white person at the funeral,? says Shelley.

Still, most of what Shelley recalls about Chris Henry took place on a field or a court. Their love of games was incessant. By freshman year at Belle Chasse High School, Shelley had been named the starting varsity quarterback, while Henry -- who?d grow to 6-foot-5 -- was intent on becoming the next Tracy McGrady. Still, seeing his friend on the gridiron incited another ambition.

?Watching Shane Shelley play and knowing that I played with him all my life, I thought that maybe I would want to do it, too,? Henry once told the New Orleans Times-Picayune. ?Shane knew I had it in me. He just kept begging me and begging me to come out and play.?

Didn?t take long for the best friends to become the best big-play combination in Belle Chasse history. ?Me and Chris was always on the same page,? says Shelley. ?I always knew where he would be. I guess that?s from growing up together. We were like brothers.?

Senior year, they won 13 straight before getting clobbered in the championship at the Superdome. But that?s not the game that stands out in Shelley?s recollection. Rather, it was a Friday night in the middle of the season. The Fighting Cardinals of Belle Chasse were on the road against Landry.

?I think Chris scored three touchdowns,? says Shelley, whose memory serves him well.

In fact, Henry, who played safety on defense, scored twice off interceptions, and again on a 55-yard screen pass. Belle Chasse won 39-14. Still, none of that resonates with Shelley as much as the unaccustomed presence of Henry?s father.


?All those years he never really talked about him,? says the fisherman, now 26, the father of twin girls with a son on the way. ?That was the only time I ever knew the man came around. Chris scored three touchdowns and his dad gave him $300.?

Three hundred.

?That was the first and last I ever heard of him,? says Shelley. ?Chris was just kind of aggravated.?

What did he do with the money? I ask.

?I don?t know,? he said. ?Probably bought some Jordans.?

After graduating in 2002, Henry went to West Virginia, where he averaged more than 20 yards a catch, while Shelley signed with the Devil Rays. His professional baseball career lasted about a year and a half. Then he returned to Belle Chasse, where his daddy taught him the oyster fishing business.

Henry, with almost boundless talent, went on to the Cincinnati Bengals, where his potential was overwhelmed by a well-earned reputation for felonious behavior. It wasn?t what had been predicted for Henry back in Belle Chasse, where his high school coach, Bob Becnel recalls him as ?a good kid, but not perfect by any stretch of the imagination.?

His NFL career was marred by gun charges, marijuana charges, assault charges and drunk driving charges, among others. He was suspended for two games in 2006, and eight games in 2007, and four games 2008, a year that also saw him placed under house arrest.

What happened? I ask Shelley.

The money was part of it, he says, but not all: ?I?m not taking nothing away from Miss Carolyn, ?cause she did a great job, but not having a dad, I think that was a lot of the problem with Chris. He was kind of lost.?

They?d speak about once a month. It?s tough when your best friend goes pro -- all those meetings and workouts and the travel. Not much time. But there was one day Chris Henry was sure to call: Father?s Day.

Shane Shelley knows that not having a daddy to teach you the oyster business does not constitute an excuse. He knows, too, that Chris -- everybody called him ?Slim? -- got more chances than a working man could dream of. He kept telling him so, too.

?You?re throwing it away, Slim.?

?Why would you want to mess it up?

?You got to slow down, Chris. Got to.?

And most damning of all: ?People in Belle Chasse say you?re doing bad.?

Finally, after the Bengals took him back in 2008, Chris Henry proclaimed his reformation. There wasn?t much reason to believe him -- unless you were Shane Shelley. ?I didn?t care what anyone said,? he recalls. ?I bragged about him all the time. It don?t get any better than telling people your best friend is playing NFL football. I always knew he would do good.?

Now Shelley recalls their conversation last summer, occasioned by Chris? return to Belle Chasse. He had three kids with his fianc?, Loleini Tonga.

?Cuz, I?m a change.?

?Better.?

?I want to be there for my kids,? said Henry. ?I want to do right.?

It sure seemed that way. This season, while nursing an injury that demonstrated how much the Bengals missed him, he remained with his fianc? and kids in Charlotte. Shane spoke to him around Thanksgiving. He was already talking about next year. He wanted to make some money in free agency. And again, he said he wanted his kids to look up to him.

Then, Wednesday afternoon, as Shelley got off the boat, someone asked if he?d heard about Slim.

?Please don?t tell me he got in trouble.?

As it happened, Chris Henry and his fianc? got into a domestic dispute. She fled in the truck, and he jumped onto the flatbed of their truck. The fall from the moving vehicle would kill him.

?Tore me up,? says Shelley, who went to work the next morning, understanding all too well his obligations at the dawn of yet another father's day.
...............................................................
 
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