The Guardian (USA)

Ruggs was driving at 156mph and twice over alcohol limit at time of fatal crash

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Former Raiders wide receiver Henry Ruggs III was driving at more than 150 mph with a blood-alcohol content twice Nevada’s legal limit before his sports car slammed into the rear of a vehicle, killing a 23-year-old woman, a prosecutor said Wednesday.

The Raiders released Ruggs late on Tuesday, just hours after the crash, his hospitaliz­ation and his booking into a Las Vegas jail. He had his initial court appearance on Wednesday on felony charges of driving under the influence of alcohol resulting in death and reckless driving that could get him up to 26 years in state prison if he is convicted.

Ruggs, 22, appearing with his attorneys, David Chesnoff and Richard Schonfeld, was not asked to enter a plea to the charges, pending the formal filing of charges by Clark county district attorney Steve Wolfson.

The name of the Las Vegas woman who died in the wrecked and burned Toyota Rav4 with her has not been made public. Las Vegas police have identified Ruggs’ passenger as Kiara Je’nai Kilgo-Washington, 22, of Las Vegas. She is believed to be the mother of his young daughter. Ruggs and Kilgo-Washington were hospitaliz­ed with unspecifie­d injuries that police said did not appear life-threatenin­g after the Chevrolet Corvette he was driving slammed into the Toyota at about 3.40am on Tuesday.

Ruggs owns a home not far from where the crash occurred, according to property records.

Prosecutor Eric Bauman said air bag computer records showed the Corvette decelerate­d from 156 mph to 127 mph before it struck the Toyota.

Judge Joe M Bonaventur­e said he could not recall a speed that high involved in a crash case since he became a judge. Neverthele­ss, the judge rejected Bauman’s request for $1m bail and set bail, at Chesnoff ’s request, at $150,000 with strict conditions, including home confinemen­t, electronic monitoring, no alcohol, no driving and surrender of Ruggs’ passport.

Bauman said Ruggs’ blood-alcohol level was 0.16%. Police said previously in a statement that Ruggs “showed signs of impairment.” Bauman also said a loaded firearm was found on the floor of the car.

Wolfson said outside court he may

file a weapon charge and expects to file a second DUI charge against Ruggs based on the serious arm injuries that he said Kilgo-Washington suffered.

The judge set Ruggs’ next court appearance for Nov. 10.

Probation is not an option in Nevada for a conviction on a charge of DUI causing death, which carries a possible sentence of two to 20 years in state prison. The possible sentence for reckless driving is one to six years in prison, with probation available.

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

The team and the league had issued statements earlier in the day saying officials were aware of the crash, offering condolence­s to the family of the woman who died and promising to gather facts about what the NFL called “this devastatin­g incident.”

Ruggs was supposed to be a cornerston­e for the Raiders. He was picked 12th overall in the 2020 draft after three years at Alabama, including helping the Crimson Tide win the NCAA championsh­ip as a freshman in 2017. Ruggs was emerging as a star this season with 24 catches for a team-high 469 yards and two touchdowns. As a rookie in 2020, he had 26 catches for 452 yards and two touchdowns.

The Raiders have had a difficult year off the field. In January running back Josh Jacobs was arrested for DUI after a crash in the early hours following their final game of last season. Last month, their head coach Jon Gruden resigned after emails emerged in which he used racist, homophobic and misogynist­ic language.

 ?? Photograph: Rick Scuteri/AP ?? Henry Ruggs III was considered a rising star in the NFL at the time of the crash.
Photograph: Rick Scuteri/AP Henry Ruggs III was considered a rising star in the NFL at the time of the crash.

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