Not sure...I am sure most LSU players get good lawyers that get them to pick up trash and other community service work before going to court. You should heaad down near the courthouse more often. Tons of good bars, resturants, and music festivals.
The silence of the police is a nice touch. When White was Chief, they held a press conference to announce every piece of evidence they collected and made sure the cameras were rolling when Jefferson was arrested. They made a public spectacle out of it.
Speaking of courthouse.........one that LSU almost signed. Like I say, sometimes its better to miss on some......... Former college football star charged in slaying of mother's boyfriend BY JESSICA TERRELL /STAFF WRITER May 13, 2014 Updated June 17, 2014 1:28 p.m. BY JESSICA TERRELL / STAFF WRITER Then-Tennessee defensive back Janzen Jackson gives an interview in 2009. On Friday, Jackson was charged with murder in connection with his mother's boyfriend's death. FILE PHOTO: WADE PAYNE, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Janzen Jackson was a prized young football player, a defensive back who donned an orange-and-white University of Tennessee uniform in 2009 after ranking among the top recruiting prospects in the nation. On Friday, Jackson quietly entered a courthouse in downtown Los Angeles in a yellow shirt and blue pants issued by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department and was charged with murder. In the back of the courtroom, an elderly woman named Mina Ribaldi sat in a uniform of her own: a tan T-shirt bearing the image of her nephew and the words “Justice for Frank Herrera.” Jackson, who briefly signed as a free agent with the NFL’s New York Giants in 2012, has been jailed since September in the death of Herrera, his mother’s longtime boyfriend. Prosecutors say he strangled the 43-year-old Herrera on Sept. 11 and left his body to decompose in the back of a car for three days. Jackson entered a plea of not guilty Friday. Jackson’s lawyers would not comment on the case. During court testimony at a preliminary hearing in April, Jackson’s mother said her son appeared to be suffering from mental issues in the weeks leading up to Herrera’s death. His arrest on Sept. 16 came after years of a roller coaster career and personal struggles. Jackson graduated from Barbe High in Lake Charles, La., in 2009. His father, Lance Guidry, is a well-known football coach in the state. Jackson got off to a promising start in college. But he also made national news during his freshman year when he and two teammates were arrested on suspicion of attempted robbery. The charges were eventually dropped. Jackson was dismissed from the Tennessee team in 2011 and finished his college career at McNeese State, where his father is an assistant coach. He was a post-draft pickup by the Giants in April 2012 but was released four months later. He moved to the Canadian Football League, signed with the Toronto Argonauts in February 2013, played five games and was released Aug. 18 for “football reasons,” a team spokesman said. Jackson came to California and spent several weeks bouncing between his great-uncle’s house in Los Angeles and the apartment his mother and Herrera shared in Santa Monica. Jackson had been talking to himself and acting strangely, his mother testified, leading her to call county mental health workers in August to evaluate him. On Sept. 11, Herrera was supposed to drive Jackson to his great-uncle’s house in the afternoon, Tesra Jackson testified. She saw Herrera in the morning before she left for the day. She said she never saw him alive again. Tesra Jackson said she tried unsuccessfully to reach Herrera that night but discovered his phone was turned off. Then, on Sept. 14, she went over to her uncle’s house and saw Herrera’s car parked nearby, she testified. Inside the car she could see flies and noticed a distinct smell. Police discovered Herrera’s body underneath a blanket, the cord from a lamp wrapped around his neck. Investigators say video surveillance from Jackson and Herrera’s building shows a man exit an elevator on the afternoon of the Sept. 11 dragging a large bundle. Janzen Jackson told police he was the person in the footage, but that the bag was part of a workout routine, Los Angeles police Detective David Torres testified at the preliminary hearing earlier this spring. Herrera’s family comes to every one of Jackson’s court dates. “He was the nicest guy on earth,” Hector Herrera said of his deceased brother. “How did this happen to someone like that?”
Why did he have to do it on THAT day. In the words of Val Kilmer in the character of Doc Holiday " Now I really hate him"
More: Janzen Jackson, former elite recruit, facing murder charges in California Janzen Jackson (photo by Amy Smotherman Burgess) KNOXVILLE, Tennessee — Former Tennessee defensive back Janzen Jackson, once one of the nation’s top football prospects, has been in jail since last September on $1 million bond for allegedly murdering a man who was staying with his mother in California. The Los Angeles Register wrote about the case last month. Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department online records indicate that Jackson is still being held at the Twin Towers Correctional Facility and faces his next court date on July 15. Jackson was an elite safety prospect out of Lake Charles, La., who signed with the Vols in 2009. He was arrested on suspicion of armed robbery during his freshman year, but charges were dropped. He was reinstated to the team and started all 13 games in 2010, but was dismissed in 2011 for undisclosed disciplinary reasons. He finished his career at McNeese State and got a brief look in the NFL before playing part of the 2013 season with the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League. Shortly after being cut by Toronto, he apparently returned to live with his mother in California, who shared the home with Frank Herrera. The Register reported that Jackson’s mother testified that her son began having mental problems and was hearing voices. Jackson is accused of strangling Herrera and leaving his decomposing body in the trunk of a car. Aside from the one story by the Register, the case does not appear to have attracted much media attention. Jackson’s father is McNeese State defensive coordinator Lance Guidry.