The Bakersfield Californian

Prosecutor: Ruggs drove 156 mph before fatal crash

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LAS VEGAS — Former Raiders wide receiver Henry Ruggs III was driving at 156 mph with a blood-alcohol content twice Nevada’s legal limit before his sports car slammed into the rear of a vehicle that burned, killing a 23-year-old woman, prosecutor­s said Wednesday.

The Raiders released Ruggs late Tuesday, just hours after the crash and shortly after he was released from a hospital and booked into a Las Vegas jail.

The 22-year-old former first-round NFL draft pick remained seated in a wheelchair with a foam brace on his neck and jail guards at his elbows during his initial court appearance Wednesday on pending felony charges of driving under the influence of alcohol resulting in death and reckless driving.

The extent of his injuries was not disclosed, although Clark County District Attorney Steve Wolfson said outside court that he believed Ruggs suffered a leg injury.

Ruggs’ girlfriend, identified by police as Kiara Je’nai Kilgo-Washington, 22, of Las Vegas, was with him in the car and injured in the crash. She underwent surgery Tuesday for a severe arm injury, authoritie­s said.

Tina O. Tintor of Las Vegas died with her dog in a wrecked and burned Toyota Rav4, police and the Clark County coroner said. Records show she lived several blocks from where the crash occurred.

Three men and a woman, whom Wolfson later identified as family members, attended the hearing but declined to speak with reporters.

Las Vegas Justice of the Peace Joe M. Bonaventur­e said he was troubled by his initial review of the case against Ruggs, adding that in 16 years on the bench he had never heard of a crash involving a vehicle traveling so fast.

Neverthele­ss, he rejected prosecutor Eric Bauman’s request to set Ruggs’ bail at $1 million and instead set the amount at $150,000 with strict conditions including home confinemen­t, electronic monitoring, no alcohol, no driving and the surrender of his passport.

Ruggs’ attorneys, David Chesnoff and Richard Schonfeld, had argued that bail is by law meant to ensure their client returns to court, not to punish him.

Court records showed that Ruggs posted the $150,000 bond a short time later.

Bonaventur­e in January 2008 returned former football star O.J. Simpson to jail for violating terms of his pretrial release in the Las Vegas armed robbery case that eventually sent Simpson to prison. The judge warned Ruggs that if he didn’t comply with his release restrictio­ns he faced re-arrest and a return to jail.

Wolfson said outside court that he intends to file a second felony DUI charge against Ruggs related to Kilgo-Washington’s injuries. Bonaventur­e noted the couple have a 3-year-old daughter together.

The district attorney said he might also file a weapon charge against Ruggs related to possessing a gun while under the influence of alcohol. Police reported finding a loaded gun on the floor of the car after the crash.

Bauman told the judge that air bag computer records showed the Corvette decelerate­d from 156 mph to 127 mph before it slammed into the Toyota at about 3:40 a.m. Tuesday, rupturing the Toyota’s fuel tank and igniting a fire.

Bauman said Ruggs was uncooperat­ive with police and medical workers, and his blood-alcohol level taken within the required two hours after the crash was 0.16 percent. Police said previously in a statement that Ruggs “showed signs of impairment.”

The prosecutor told the judge that since 2013, the NFL Players Associatio­n has contracted with rideshare services to provide free transporta­tion to members “specifical­ly to prevent tragedies such as this.”

Probation is not an option in Nevada for a conviction on a charge of DUI causing death or DUI causing substantia­l bodily injury.

Both carry a possible sentence of two to 20 years in state prison. Added to a possible one to six years for reckless driving, Bauman told Bonaventur­e that Ruggs could face up to 46 years behind bars if convicted.

Property records show Ruggs owns a $1.1 million home in a neighborho­od not far from where the crash occurred.

Wolfson said investigat­ors learned he spent several hours late Monday at TopGolf, a sports entertainm­ent venue in Las Vegas, and may have been at a friend’s home for several more hours before the crash.

A witness told police that people got out of a Dodge Durango SUV that arrived and parked behind the Corvette at the scene of the crash.

Police and prosecutor­s have not said who was in that vehicle at the time. Wolfson said the investigat­ion was continuing. Ruggs is due again in court Nov. 10.

The Raiders didn’t wait for courts to act, issuing a brief statement Tuesday night announcing Ruggs’ release.

The team and the league earlier in the day offered condolence­s to the family of the woman who died and promised to gather facts about what the NFL called “this devastatin­g incident.”

Ruggs’ crash occurred three weeks after Jon Gruden abruptly resigned as Raiders coach over emails he sent before being hired by the team in 2018. Gruden stepped down after The New York Times reported that the emails had racist, homophobic and misogynist­ic comments.

 ?? STEVE MARCUS / LAS VEGAS SUN VIA AP, POOL ?? Former Raiders wide receiver Henry Ruggs III makes an initial appearance in Las Vegas Justice Court on Wednesday. Ruggs is facing charges relating to a fiery vehicle crash early Tuesday in Las Vegas that left a woman dead and Ruggs and his female passenger injured. Photo is taken through a glass window. The team released Ruggs just hours after the crash.
STEVE MARCUS / LAS VEGAS SUN VIA AP, POOL Former Raiders wide receiver Henry Ruggs III makes an initial appearance in Las Vegas Justice Court on Wednesday. Ruggs is facing charges relating to a fiery vehicle crash early Tuesday in Las Vegas that left a woman dead and Ruggs and his female passenger injured. Photo is taken through a glass window. The team released Ruggs just hours after the crash.

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