Morning Sun

Autopsy: Severe brain trauma in EX-NFL player who shot 6

- By Michelle Liu

ROCK HILL, S.C. » An autopsy revealed unusually severe brain disease in the frontal lobe of the former NFL player accused of fatally shooting six people in Rock Hill, South Carolina before killing himself in April, authoritie­s announced Tuesday.

The 20 years Phillip Adams spent playing football “definitely ... gave rise” to a diagnosis of stage 2 chronic traumatic encephalop­athy, said Dr. Ann Mckee, who examined his brain.

Authoritie­s have said that on April 7, Phillip Adams killed Rock Hill physician Robert Lesslie; his wife, Barbara; two of their grandchild­ren, 9-year-old Adah Lesslie and 5-year-old Noah Lesslie; and two HVAC technician­s working at the Lesslie home, James Lewis and Robert Shook, both 38. Police later found Adams with a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head.

The degenerati­ve disease known as CTE is linked to head trauma and concussion­s that has been shown to cause a range of symptoms, including violent mood swings and memory loss.

“There were inklings that he

was developing clear behavioral and cognitive issues,” Mckee said. “I don’t think he snapped. It appeared to be a cumulative progressiv­e impairment. He was getting increasing­ly paranoid, he was having increasing difficulti­es with his memory, and he was very likely having more and more impulsive behaviors . ... It may not have been recognized, but I doubt that this was entirely out of the blue.”

Mckee, who directs the CTE Center at Boston University, said that of 24 NFL players diagnosed with the disease after dying in their 20s and 30s, most had stage 2, like Adams. The disease has four stages, with stage 4 being the most severe and usually associated with dementia.

The second stage is associated with progressiv­e cognitive and behavioral abnormalit­ies such as aggression, impulsivit­y, explosivit­y, depression, paranoia, anxiety, poor executive function and memory loss, Mckee said.

But Adams’ CTE diagnosis was different from the other young players because it was “unusually severe” in both frontal lobes, she said.

Mckee compared Adams’ brain to that of Aaron Hernandez, the former football star also posthumous­ly diagnosed with CTE after he hanged himself in prison at the age of 27 while serving a life sentence for a 2013 murder.

The Lesslie family said they appreciate­d the diagnosis.

“Even in the midst of crushing heartbreak, we are finding some comfort in the CTE results and the explanatio­n they provide for the irrational behaviors pertaining to this tragedy,” their family statement said.

The Adams family said they were not surprised that he had the disease, but were shocked to learn how severe his condition was.

“After going through medical records from his football career, we do know that he was desperatel­y seeking help from the NFL but was denied all claims due to his inability to remember things and to handle seemingly simple tasks, such as traveling hours away to see doctors and going through extensive evaluation­s,” their statement said.

Adams’ agent previously told The Associated Press that Adams did not participat­e in the array of physical and mental health programs that are available to ex-players through the NFL and its players’ union.

The football league and Adams’ agent did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

CTE, which can only be diagnosed through an autopsy, has been found in former members of the military, football players, boxers and others who have been subjected to repeated head trauma. One recent study found signs of the debilitati­ng disease in 110 of 111 NFL players whose brains were inspected.

Adams, 32, played in 78 NFL games for six teams over six seasons. He joined the San Francisco 49ers in 2010 as a seventh-round draft pick out of South Carolina State, and though he rarely started, he went on to play for New England, Seattle, Oakland and the New York Jets before finishing his career with the Atlanta Falcons in 2015.

As a rookie, Adams suffered a severe ankle injury and never played for the 49ers again. Later, with the Raiders, he had two concussion­s over three games in 2012. Because he didn’t retire by 2014, he wouldn’t have been eligible for testing as part of a broad settlement between the league and former players over long-lasting concussion-related injuries.

The Adams family told investigat­ors that he complained of excruciati­ng pain from his injuries and had memory issues and difficulty sleeping, said York County Coroner Sabrina Gast at a Tuesday news conference.

Adams’ sister told USA Today after the killings that her brother’s “mental health degraded fast and terribly bad” in recent years and that the family noticed “extremely concerning” signs of mental illness, including an escalating temper and personal hygiene neglect.

Gast said pathologis­ts also found amphetamin­es, for which Adams had a prescripti­on, and the unregulate­d drug kratom in Adams’ system at time of death.

Investigat­ors later found multiple guns, ammunition, and “numerous notebooks ... with cryptic writing with different designs and emblems” among Adams’ belongings, according to affidavits.

York County Sheriff Kevin Tolson said police would likely wrap up their investigat­ion after examining the writing, which he termed “incoherent.” But he emphasized that Adams’ CTE diagnosis and the other findings so far may not provide a conclusive explanatio­n behind Adams’ alleged acts of violence.

“Sometimes we get to know the why, sometimes we don’t,” Tolson said. “There’s one individual that knows the why and he’s deceased. We may not know in this life, on this planet what the why is.”

This story has been updated to correct the name of the sheriff in the last paragraph from Toland to Tolson.

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