Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Interesting Article/Discussion on Ray Lewis


Proudiddy

Recommended Posts

I admit, I'm a Ray Lewis fan... At least the Ray Lewis we've all come to know since the Atlanta incident. BUT, I've always had questions. It feels like I'm wrong for pulling for him IF he did indeed kill two individuals... In fact, it doesn't feel just as though I shouldn't be a fan, but rather I should despise him because in my mind, there is no redeeming a murder. Murderers (non-self-defense/unprovoked) and child molesters are the filth of the earth in my mind.

Yet, I have no resolution on the issue because we DON'T KNOW what happened with certainty. So, I default to being a fan because everything since then has said nothing but what a high-quality individual he is.

It's always been an interesting dilemma. So, this morning, I log on Facebook and Bonnie Bernstein, who I started following after an interesting piece she wrote on the Penn St. stuff awhile back, gives her take on my feed:

276616_170302823055385_914964778_q.jpg

Bonnie Bernstein

13 hours ago

True story: One day (long... long ago) during my middle school years, I snuck into the forest with my friends. Some of my classmates were going through this experimental phase with cigarettes. I hung out, but never took a single puff. No desire. Never one to succumb to peer pressure.

My parents weren't around when I got home, so I quickly threw my clothes in the wash. I was worried they'd make assumptions if they smelled the smoke that had permeated my jeans and jacket.

When Mom got back, I told her I was just hangin out with my friends after school. In the unlikely event she inquired about anyone smoking, I would have lied. Wasn't throwing my friends under the bus.

Was I guilty of smoking because I washed my clothes?

Had I lied, did that mean I was lighting up, too?

I don't believe Ray Lewis was a complete saint the day of the double stabbing for which he was initially charged (and yes, I'm well aware murder is a lot worse than smoking, thank you). He ditched his bloody suit, which was never recovered, and was initially dishonest with investigators. That's clearly obstruction of justice, for which he plead guilty.

But Lewis never faced a murder trial trial. His charges were dropped. The two friends he ultimately testified against were acquitted.

Will we ever know what precisely went down January 31, 2000? No. But automatically equating obstruction of justice to PHYSICALLY taking a knife and fatally stabbing two people flies in the face of everything our legal system--albeit imperfect-- is supposed to be about. That Ray Lewis payed for his friends' trial lawyers doesn't provide any ironclad evidence of murder. That line of thinking implies anyone who covers someone else's defense costs is somehow entangled in the crime.

That Lewis payed a substantial settlement to the victims' families is another compelling argument for assuming guilt, but again... completely subjective. Perhaps it was guilt of a different kind: knowing those people would never again see their loved ones, and Lewis watched it all go down. How can we possibly know?

With Lewis' pending retirement, all these questions are understandably resurfacing. The conundrum among many of my journalistic brethren: determining how we, personally, feel about Ray Lewis. On one hand, he was unquestionably with the wrong crew at the wrong time that night in Atlanta; on the other, he's had an incredibly positive impact on so many on the field and off it through his tireless charitable endeavors. I don't give a crap about how good of a linebacker he is. That doesn't sway my judgement one iota.

So, as you ponder Ray Lewis' legacy, ask yourself...

Was I guilty of smoking because I washed my clothes?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

How sure are you he had anything to do with the murders?

As I said, I'm not. I don't know one way or another. The issue for me is that there is always that question. None of us know if he did or didn't have anything to do with those murders. But, from everything I've read over the years and the things I've seen on the incident, he at least didn't cooperate with investigators... Which is understandable. And then there is the fact that he reached a settlement with the victim's families within the last few years (may have been last year IIRC).

We see all the time where members of an athlete's entourage take the fall for a guy and in return he takes care of them/their family for life. I just don't know. But the fact that the suit disappeared and was never found and that he was at least in the area of the crime... I mean, that all points to the fact that he at least was present in the immediate area of the murder.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Yeah this needs to happen ASAP. I don’t care if the price is lower. These Vikings fans on Twitter are absolutely insufferable. Acting like they have been world beaters for the last 60 years and thinking Carolina should just hand him over for nothing. We’ve had 7 or so tough seasons in a row and we have still been to two superbowls since they have and won more playoff games since 1995.    I hope Dan sends him to Detroit for a 2040 7th rounder and eats half the contract. Even Sheena is replying to them.
    • I hope your cath went well
    • So did the Panthers initiate this by making him "available for the right price" or was this something Thielen himself pushed for? I also never saw this quote he made about JJ McCarthy back in June. https://sports.yahoo.com/article/panthers-adam-thielen-both-asked-182711572.html Thielen believes McCarthy is built for big moments and will eventually show the world the skillset that won the Michigan Wolverines a national championship in 2023/2024. He even said McCarthy could be the “face of the league.” “I have high expectations for him. I've been able to be around a little bit through some of the time last summer... back in Minnesota, and I think he has the ability to be one of the great quarterbacks this season and the face of this league at some point. You know, I think he's got every tool and intangible that you can have,” Thielen said. “Obviously, it's a difficult league and it's not gonna just be easy, but I think he has the ability to handle adversity to be able to be big in big moments, as you saw when he was in college. I think he's got a great support staff around him, whether it be the coaches or the trainers.” Sounds like he's had one foot out the door for some time now.
×
×
  • Create New...