WR Rainey agrees to deferral for misdemeanor

By Adam Silverstein
September 27, 2010

Florida Gators redshirt junior wide receiver Chris Rainey has agreed to deferred prosecution for a misdemeanor stalking charge after originally being charged with a third-degree felony for aggravated stalking, according to Florida Today.

Rainey must adhere to the following terms: six moths probation, no hostile contact with the woman, counseling, performing 10 hours of community service, paying a $50 fine and donating $100 to a domestic abuse center. As long as he fulfills the requirements and obligations presented to him by the court, he will be granted amnesty and the charges will be dismissed in six months’ time as he is a first-time offender.

Indefinitely suspended by the Gators, Rainey may have a renewed hope of returning to the team. A misdemeanor charge and admission by the state of Florida that he may have been overcharged in the first place could help him get back on the field. Nevertheless, head coach Urban Meyer has already ruled him out for Saturday’s game against the No. 1/1 Alabama Crimson Tide.

State attorney Bill Cervone explained the decision and plea agreement:

“Although I believe that probable cause existed for a felony charge because the facts involve an at least arguable threat, which is within the legal definition of felony stalking, the Defendant was never in a position to have acted on that threat and there is little if anything in his actions that night or in his background to suggest that he would have done so.

“Misdemeanor stalking is legally the more appropriate charge when no imminent danger was perceived or can be proven beyond a reasonable doubt, and the harassing contact, not done in person, occurred in a short, compressed time period. The Victim has in fact essentially stated that she was more annoyed than threatened, and that she did not want an arrest or prosecution, only the resolution of an immediate problem.” […]

“As a result, the case is being re-cast as a misdemeanor stalking offense, which as a matter of law more closely reflects the facts involved. Since the Defendant has no prior criminal history other than an unrelated drivers license charge that was resolved with no conviction, he will be treated as any first offender would in similar circumstances and offered a deferral agreement. The terms of that agreement have been crafted to address the concerns of my office and, if complied with, will allow the Defendant and everyone else involved to move on.”

4 Comments

  1. brlgator says:

    Adam,

    You beat me on the chomp-o-meter. I was watching the charges game and saw the safety. I was pumped when the chargers player jumped up and did the chomp. Its good to see Siler player a bigger role on their defense cause i know he s been a special teams stud for them

  2. npgator says:

    Some of our former players are tearing it up and some seem stuck in nuetral. I am surprised that Harvey and Moss have not panned out (and don’t expect that light will ever come on). Cunningham will be a good one now that he is playing and Dunlap – see reference to Harvey and Moss. Siler and Spikes are both solid LB’s. Maybe I am jumping the gun on Dunlap but to me he exmpified his commitment last December before the Alabama game.

  3. Mr2Bits says:

    Interesting notes on Rainey. My guess is that he will be back with the team in a few weeks and he’s not back already as the team needs to focus on beating some red elephant ass this week and the Tigers next week. I’m going to say MissState or Georgia he will be back on the field…..should make from a PR nightmare.

  4. John S says:

    Well that actually makes sense, I wish this kind of judgement would have occurred the night he was arrested. Granted Rainey is still responsible for his actions, but it did not deserve the attention it got. It seems odd that they didn’t mention the concussion.

Join The
Discussion

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Top
WordPress Appliance - Powered by TurnKey Linux