January 31, 2011 9:05 AM
- Text
Source: Jayson Williams to Plead Guilty
(AP)
Retired NBA star Jayson Williams has cut a plea deal that would send him to prison for up to three years for accidentally shooting a driver at his New Jersey estate in 2002, a person with knowledge of the case told The Associated Press on Thursday.
Williams, who retired in 2000 after playing nine seasons in the NBA for the Philadelphia 76ers and New Jersey Nets, was to face a retrial in January on a reckless manslaughter count.
The person, who not authorized to speak about the case, told the AP on condition of anonymity that Williams is to plead guilty to aggravated assault on Friday. Because a gun was used in the crime, Williams must serve at least 18 months in prison, the person said.
The plea deal would resolve all charges in the case that dragged out for nearly eight years.
During his 2002 trial, the jury deadlocked on the reckless manslaughter count, acquitted him of aggravated manslaughter and convicted him of covering up the shooting. He was never sentenced for the cover-up counts, pending the outcome of the retrial, and has remained free on bail.
Several messages left for defense attorney Joseph Hayden were not returned Thursday.
Witnesses testified that while showing off a shotgun in his bedroom, Williams snapped the weapon shut and it fired one shot that struck driver Costas Christofi in the chest, killing him. They also testified that Williams initially placed the gun in the dead man's hands and instructed those present in the bedroom to lie about what happened.
The defense has maintained the shooting was an accident and that Williams panicked afterward.
Williams, who retired in 2000 after playing nine seasons in the NBA for the Philadelphia 76ers and New Jersey Nets, was to face a retrial in January on a reckless manslaughter count.
The person, who not authorized to speak about the case, told the AP on condition of anonymity that Williams is to plead guilty to aggravated assault on Friday. Because a gun was used in the crime, Williams must serve at least 18 months in prison, the person said.
The plea deal would resolve all charges in the case that dragged out for nearly eight years.
During his 2002 trial, the jury deadlocked on the reckless manslaughter count, acquitted him of aggravated manslaughter and convicted him of covering up the shooting. He was never sentenced for the cover-up counts, pending the outcome of the retrial, and has remained free on bail.
Several messages left for defense attorney Joseph Hayden were not returned Thursday.
Witnesses testified that while showing off a shotgun in his bedroom, Williams snapped the weapon shut and it fired one shot that struck driver Costas Christofi in the chest, killing him. They also testified that Williams initially placed the gun in the dead man's hands and instructed those present in the bedroom to lie about what happened.
The defense has maintained the shooting was an accident and that Williams panicked afterward.
Popular Now in Sports
- Watch: Will Ferrell does Bulls-Hornets intros
- Forbes list: America's most disliked athletes
- Watch: 7-foot-5 teen basketball player dominates
- Is Eli Manning a Hall of Famer?
- Jeremy Lin unlikely star for Knicks
- Ricky Williams: Parcells convinced me to retire
- Ex-MLB pitcher: I did cocaine before most games
- NFL: The Patriots Cheated
- Jeremy Lin's coach at Harvard: "He's fearless"
- Dwayne Wade's Wife, Kids Suing His Girlfriend
- Porn star: MLB agent used me to recruit players
- Birdman: I'm betting $5 million on Super Bowl
- Reggie Bush "stinks," teammate says
- Luol Deng picked as NBA All-Star
- "Halftime in America"
- JaMarcus Russell: I'm not lazy, fat or a junkie
- NFL's Top 100 Players of All-Time: Debate
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook
on CBS News
- Bus rollover injures about 30 people
- Canada protests Russian arms support to Syria
- Al-Shabab, al-Qaida: Linkup of groups in decline?
- Al-Shabab, al-Qaida: Linkup of groups in decline?
on Facebook
- Adele sings a cappella for Anderson Cooper
- Josh Powell had "incestuous" images on his home computer, authorities say
on CBS News





