True Crimes - Athletes Edition

True stories of real crimes. 

You have the right to (not) remain silent,

The Last Night’s Game Team


1. During his career, Chicago Bears (NFL – National Football League) wide receiver Sam Hurd was the head of a high-level, drug dealing operation and it appeared he thought he was invincible. How so? Long before he was arrested, one of his associates was pulled over with $88,000 in cash while driving Hurd’s car. Hurd had the guts to ask for the money back. He knew the cops were onto him but he refused to believe that cell phones that came from Mexico could be wiretapped. Needless to say he’s serving out a 15-year sentence in Texas. NEW PHONE WHO DIS? 

2. Currently serving out his 25-year sentence in a Moroccan prison is former UFC (Ultimate Fighting Championship) fighter Lee “Lightning” Murray. He was charged with being the mastermind in the largest bank heist in history - $100M. While the plan was flawlessly executed – the robbery took place without any injuries or even a bullet being fired – they weren’t so smart afterward where flubs like abandoned guns and cars and snitches were prevalent. Don’t think this half-Moroccan citizen has let the downtime go to waste, he tried to escape using tiny saws that were snuck in inside of biscuits. WHERE THERE’S A WILL 

3. We’ve all stepped out of the house in our favorite outfit only to get something on it. The same happened to former NFL player Ray Lewis at a post-Super Bowl party. He and some friends got into a fight that left two people dead. Lewis was a suspect because had blood on his suit and in his limo. The cream-colored suit became the storyline of the trial. Lewis said his suit was too nice to have committed murder but the suit disappeared not long after the crime and is still M.I.A. today. No one was charged with the murder and Lewis ended up going to jail for obstruction of justice because he instructed his friends to not speak of the incident. SNITCHES GET STITCHES

4. We all know the story of former NFL player O.J. Simpson and his trial for the 1994 murder of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ron Goldman. From the white Bronco freeway chase, to the black leather glove that didn’t fit the story blazed across the headlines. While he was acquitted in that trial, exactly 13 years to the day of when he was famously acquitted, he wasn’t so lucky. He was sentenced to prison for kidnapping and robbery after he tried to take back his memorabilia. He served nine years in prison and was released last year. You can follow his post-prison adventures on his (slightly whacky) social mediaIF THE GLOVE DON’T FIT 

5. Lenny Dykstra went from the top of the world as World Series winner with the New York Mets (MLB - Major League Baseball) in 1986 to prison. Long story short, post-baseball he claimed to have a 100% hit rate at picking winning stocks and convinced people to jump on board his bandwagon, including the money man himself - Jim Cramer. Then he failed at starting a magazine, meanwhile pissing a lot of people off. Eventually he filed for bankruptcy, owing an obscene amount of money to creditors. Life finally caught up with him when he was arrested and served time in prison for bankruptcy fraud. He hid a bunch of assets during his bankruptcy filing and decided to sell them afterward for cash. Shocking, he got caught. THEY KNOW EVERYTHING