New England Patriots safety Jabrill Peppers took the stand in his own defense Thursday as his trial on domestic violence charges got underway.
The Patriots’ $24-million safety Jabrill Peppers admitted to possessing cocaine ahead of jury selection for a trial on assault charges.
New England Patriots safety Jabrill Peppers was found “not guilty” on all assault charges on Friday, per Boston Herald’s Flint McColgan. Peppers was tried in front of a jury composed of five females and one male juror. After hearing the arguments, it took the jurors about an hour to deliberate before finally reaching a decision.
Peppers was arrested in October and charged with assault, strangulation and possession of drugs after an altercation with his girlfriend at his Braintree apartment.
The domestic violence trial of New England Patriots safety Jabrill Peppers began Thursday at a courthouse in Quincy, Mass., after he admitted cocaine possession.
New England Patriots safety Jabrill Peppers pleaded guilty to cocaine possession Thursday, according to WBZ News in Boston. Peppers is still facing a trial
Peppers, an East Orange, New Jersey, native, went to Don Bosco Prep and graduated from Paramus Catholic before playing football at Michigan. In 2017, the Cleveland Browns selected him in the first round (No. 25 overall) in the NFL Draft.
New England Patriots safety Jabrill Peppers is scheduled to go on trial Wednesday in Quincy, Massachusetts on domestic violence charges.
Along with her testimony, prosecutors showed several videos of the incident, in which Peppers can be seen asking the naked woman to repeatedly leave his house in Braintree, Massachusetts.
Two illegal immigrants, one accused of rape and the other fentanyl trafficking, have been grabbed by the feds — with the Trump administration’s new U.S. Attorney for Massachusetts
A guilty plea was entered by a Braintree man charged with a fentanyl conspiracy charge. The U.S. Attorney’s Office says that an investigation began in 2019 that identified 32-year-old Jonathan Melendez Decatro,
A Massachusetts man, one of 12 people from three states arrested in 2022 as part of a cross-border investigation into the illegal sales of cocaine and methamphetamine in New Hampshire and Maine, has been sentenced to 25 to 50 years in state prison,