Judge: NFL Coach's Home "A Drug Emporium"
Judge Critical Of Philadelphia Eagles Coach Andy Reid After Sentencing His Sons To Jail
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Garrett Reid, 24, and Britt Reid, 22, two of Philadelphia Eagles coach Andy Reid's sons, are shown in these February 2007 file photos in Plymouth Meeting, Pa., and King of Prussia,Pa, respectively. (AP/Mark Stehle, George Widman)
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Philadelphia Eagles football coach Andy Reid, center, exits a Montgomery County courtroom in Norristown, Pa., Nov. 1, 2007. (AP/Matt Rourke)
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Philadelphia Eagles head coach Andy Reid, right, reacts to the crowd as he and his sons Garrett, left, and Britt, center, walk off the field after the Eagles beat the New York Giants 24-21, in this Dec. 30, 2001 file photo. (AP Photo/Chris Gardner, File)
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"There isn't any structure there that this court can depend upon," Montgomery County Judge Steven O'Neill said before sentencing 22-year-old Britt Reid to up to 23 months in jail plus probation.
"I'm saying this is a family in crisis," O'Neill said.
Earlier Thursday, O'Neill sentenced 24-year-old Garrett Reid, a drug addict and dealer who said he got a thrill out of selling drugs in "the 'hood," to up to 23 months in jail for smashing into another motorist's car while high on heroin.
O'Neill noted that searches of the Reid home found illegal and prescription drugs throughout the house. He said both boys had been overmedicated throughout much of their lives and that Britt got hooked on painkillers when he suffered a football injury in high school.
"It sounds more or less like a drug emporium there, with the drugs all over the house, and you're an addict," O'Neill told Britt Reid.
Andy Reid and his wife, Tammy, were in court but declined to comment. The judge said the parents clearly loved and supported their children and had tried many times over the years to get them help.
"Andy and Tammy are supportive of their son. That has been their position since this all began. He will not comment on it," Garrett Reid's defense attorney, Ross Weiss, said before the judge's comments.
Both Weiss and Britt Reid's attorney, William Winning, declined to comment after the hearing. Andy and Tammy Reid quickly were escorted by sheriff's deputies and their personal bodyguard through the courthouse basement.
It sounds more or less like a drug emporium there, with the drugs all over the house, and you're an addict.
Judge Steven O'NeillAndy Reid took a five-week leave from the Eagles in the off season to deal with his family's troubles. He has routinely declined to discuss his sons' legal problems, but said he would not resign from the team because of them.
On Thursday, Britt Reid said everything he did, he did without his parents' knowledge, but O'Neill questioned that.
Both Reids can apply for a special drug court program that would require them to report to authorities regularly, undergo rigorous drug testing and hold down jobs.
The coach's two sons got into separate legal trouble on Jan. 30.
Garrett Reid tested positive for heroin and admitted having used it that day. He ran a red light in Plymouth Township and hit another car. Authorities found syringes with heroin and testosterone in his SUV.
In a separate incident that same day, Britt Reid pointed a handgun at another driver following a dispute. He pleaded guilty to a string of charges, including carrying a firearm without a license, a felony.
CBS News affiliate KYW reported that police found a shotgun and hollow-point bullets along with cocaine, marijuana and OxyContin in the vehicle Britt Reid was driving and later found the handgun they believe he had brandished at the other driver.
While police found only weapons and ammunition - and not drugs - at the house, O'Neill apparently based his remarks on Britt Reid's statement that he once mistakenly grabbed a Vicodin tablet instead of health supplements out of a pill drawer at the home.
Britt Reid was sentenced to eight to 23 months in jail plus five years' probation on gun and drug charges. He can apply for the special drug program after five months.
Garrett Reid was sentenced to two to 23 months in the county prison plus one year of probation. He told O'Neill that he would apply to the drug court program.
"I don't want to be that kid who was the son of the head coach of the Eagles, who was spoiled and on drugs and OD'd and just faded into oblivion," he said in court.
Senior Deputy Attorney General Marc Costanzo said authorities were satisfied with the sentence, noting "the drug court is the best part."
Speaking in court and in a statement to a probation officer, Garrett Reid said he made a fast descent into hard drugs and enjoyed being the rich kid who dealt drugs in poor, violent Philadelphia neighborhoods and in the tony suburbs.
His addiction persists, according to authorities, who found 89 prescription drug pills in Reid's jail cell Thursday morning. They believe he smuggled them in his rectum when he was jailed earlier this week.
"That's consistent with someone as severely drug addicted as he is," prosecutor Costanzo said.
Garrett Reid's descent in drug use and dealing was steep, according to a probation report read in court. Reid said he didn't use drugs until he graduated from high school, then started with marijuana and alcohol at age 18. That was followed by prescription pain killers Percocet and OxyContin, and then cocaine and heroin.
By 20, he was in drug rehab.
Reid said he sold drugs to his friends and their parents in the suburbs and in a notoriously tough section of Philadelphia.
"I liked being the rich kid in that area and having my own high status life," Reid told a probation officer in a statement read by the judge. "I could go anywhere in the 'hood. They all knew who I was. I enjoyed it. I liked being a drug dealer."
He said in court Thursday that he has stopped selling drugs.
"I did get a thrill out of it," he said. "That was also part of the whole new world that opened up to me when I smoked that first joint."
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.


I don''t get too excited when idiots want to take drugs themselves...but when they start dealing for the thrill of it and start kids on drugs...they can rot.
"I do wonder", I said, being serious for a moment, " what his sentence would have been had he been a "Black" youth caught under the exact same circumstances?"
When you''re head coach of a NFL team, you better make *** sure there is nothing like this going on in your private life or with your family because it doesn''t take long for the media to find out about it. You can''t hide anything or keep secrets when you''re a public figure. Now that it''s gone to court, Coach will be hounded mercilessly.
Imagine how much better this country would be without illegal drugs. Look at all the lives that have been ruined. People that have died. Crimes that have been committed to get money to pay for drugs.
Let''''s see....the police raided the home and found no drugs there and the judge declares that it is a "drug emporium" with "drugs all over the place" leaving the reporter to interpret for the judge (and for us) what he must have based his judgement on since it does not rest on any discernable facts.
Ahhhhh, only in America!
Posted by ojama at 10:40 PM : Nov 01, 2007
What part of the above statement, that you didn''t understand?
What on earth possessed you to write something like that!? I have never resorted to name calling another poster before now...but you are one sick friggin b.itch regardless if you are a male or a female.
You''re sick to write something like that. What the *** wrong with you?
Hopw else can they have a monopoly on billions of dollars in blak-market profits?
Terrorists and drug gangs get a large percentage of their money from selling illegal drugs, just like Al Capone and all the other gangs of bootleggers and rum runners controlling the black market for alcohol during alcohol prohibition.
To best fight crime and violence, cops say END PROHIBITION!!!
www.leap.cc
Law Enforcement Against Prohibition
Let''''''''s see....the police raided the home and found no drugs there and the judge declares that it is a "drug emporium" with "drugs all over the place" leaving the reporter to interpret for the judge (and for us) what he must have based his judgement on since it does not rest on any discernable facts.
Ahhhhh, only in America!
Posted by ojama at 10:40 PM : Nov 01, 2007
What part of the above statement, that you didn''''t understand?
Posted by slim1h2o
Perhaps it was this...
"While police found only weapons and ammunition - and not drugs - at the house..."
Why are there 2 conflicting comments with this story?
"While police found only weapons and ammunition - and not drugs - at the house..."
Why are there 2 conflicting comments with this story?
Posted by Displeased at 09:28 AM : Nov 02, 2007
I didn''t see that 2nd statement, the 1st time, but found it. The two statements do not make any sense at all.
Does CBS have their facts correct?
Sincerely,
Criminal Defense Lawyer.
Sincerely,
Criminal Defense Lawyer.
I must say that this is disturbing if not predictable. They have had problems in the past and the truth is that they are 24 and 22, no college education and living off of their parents. Andy and Tammy Reid must know that they are enablers and allowing this behavoir. No 24 year old should still live at home.
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