The Prince George Citizen

NFL rookie hopes to honour brother after forgiving his killer

- Cindy BOREN

The idea, which came from the pain a family suffered when one of its members was shot to death, came from Atlanta Falcons Coach Dan Quinn.

When jersey number 30 became available Monday with the waiver of Ricky Ortiz, Quinn suggested that it go to rookie running back Qadree Ollison, now No. 32, as a way to honour his brother, who had worn the number as a youngster and died after being shot at a Niagara Falls, New York, gas station.

Lerowne Harris, Ollison’s older brother, died Oct. 14, 2017, after being shot three times, a crime for which Denzel Lewis of Niagara Falls pleaded guilty to firstdegre­e manslaught­er in May 2018. He was sentenced to up to 25 years in prison three months later for what the judge said was “an assassinat­ion more than a murder.”

Police reports and accounts of the crime showed that Harris, who was 14 years older than Qadree, fled across the parking lot after being shot, then was placed in a car and driven to Niagara Falls Memorial Medical Center, where he died. A youth-league star, Harris had dropped out of high school before his junior year; Qadree used football as a way out of housing projects in Niagara Falls.

“I grew up in a rough neighbourh­ood, like any type of projects where drugs, and gangs, and violence are evident,” Qadree said (via ESPN). “Really, just to be blunt, my brother got caught up in that lifestyle.”

Ollison, a fifth-round pick by the Falcons out of Pittsburgh, and his father, Wayne, differed over Lewis’ punishment, with Qadree writing an emotional note to the judge explaining why he could not hate Lewis, with whom he had attended middle school.

“For some reason, you thought it was right to go and gun down my brother that morning of Oct. 14. You had that choice. My brother, at gunpoint, didn’t have a choice to live. It wasn’t up to him. He lost the two greatest things God gives us as people: He lost his ability to choose, and he lost his life,” Qadree wrote. “Now here I am, and I have this choice to hate you or not. I choose not to. I don’t hate you, Denzel. I hate what you did, most certainly. But I still think your life is just as precious as the next person’s. No life means more than another’s. None of us are perfect.”

His father may have felt differentl­y, but he was proud of Qadree.

“It just shows that he’s a special guy,” Wayne said of his son, ESPN reported. “I’m telling you as a father, I didn’t have that forgivenes­s in my heart. Qadree understood that and said, ‘Well, Dad, one day you will get there.’ It takes a special person to lose their older brother, their idol, and still be able to put your head down and move forward.”

Qadree will do so with a number that honours his brother and unites his family.

“They’ve got to call and ask the league, but [Quinn] said it shouldn’t be a problem,” Ollison told ESPN, saying that the request could take five to seven days.

“A number is a number, but this means a little bit more to me. It’s going to be really nice to have that. It’s going to be exciting for everybody, just wearing that number and what it represents to me and my family.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Atlanta Falcons running back Qadree Ollison (32) during an NFL preseason football game Aug. 29.
AP PHOTO Atlanta Falcons running back Qadree Ollison (32) during an NFL preseason football game Aug. 29.

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