Chris
Henry
Chris Henry (May 17, 1983 –
December 17, 2009) was an American football wide receiver who played five
seasons in the National Football League for the Cincinnati Bengals. He
played college football at West Virginia and was drafted by the Bengals
in the third round of the 2005 NFL Draft.
Henry was involved in a string of legal troubles
during his professional career, which include several arrests for such
offenses as driving under the influence, marijuana possession, assault,
and criminal damage. He was suspended for the first four games of the
2008 season.
Early Years
Henry was born to Carolyn Lee and
David Henry in Belle Chasse, Louisiana. He attended Belle Chasse High
School where he was named New Orleans small schools offensive player of
the year during his senior year. During that season the Fighting Cardinals
made it to the Louisiana AAA State championship game, which was played
at the Louisiana Superdome. Henry also excelled in basketball and track.
College Career
Henry enrolled at West Virginia
University in 2002, spending his first season as a redshirt. In 2003,
he earned Big East Conference freshman of the year and All-Big East second-team
honors for catching 41 passes and gaining 1,006 yards and scoring 10 touchdowns.
He also became the second player in school history to record over 1,000
receiving yards in one season (behind David Saunders), and his 24.5 yards
per reception are the third most in a season in school history. Henry's
best game was a career-high performance of 209 yards and two touchdowns
against Syracuse. His career-long reception came against Rutgers that
season, an 83-yard reception.
In 2004, Henry started seven games and caught 52
passes for 872 yards with 12 touchdowns. After catching three passes in
a 30–18 loss to Florida State in the 2005 Gator Bowl, Henry announced
that he would enter the 2005 NFL Draft. Henry's 12 touchdowns ties him
with Darius Reynaud for the school's single-season touchdown record. While
his 52 receptions are the eighth most in a season
During Henry's sophomore season,
he was ejected from a game at Rutgers University due to multiple unsportsmanlike
conduct penalties and was suspended for the season finale against the
University of Pittsburgh. His former Mountaineers coach, Rich Rodriguez,
stated that he was "an embarrassment to himself and the program"
for his conduct. Henry majored in athletic coaching education.
Accomplishments
Henry was the third player in Mountaineers'
history to average more than twenty yards per catch for his career. Henry's
1,878 career receiving yards is eighth most in school history, while his
93 receptions are the 14th most. His 22 touchdown receptions are also
second most in school history. Henry's six career 100-yard receiving games
is tied for third most in school history.
Professional Career
Cincinnati Bengals
Henry was drafted by the Cincinnati Bengals in the third round of the
2005 NFL Draft. He made his NFL debut on September 18, 2005 against the
Minnesota Vikings. In his rookie season with the Bengals, he amassed 31
receptions for 422 yards and six touchdowns. In the Bengals' first playoff
game in fifteen years against the Pittsburgh Steelers, he had a reception
for 66 yards on the Bengals' second play from scrimmage. However, on the
play, both he and Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer suffered knee injuries.
In his second season, Henry totaled 605 yards on
36 receptions for nine touchdowns, with an average of 16.8 yards per catch.
On the second game of the season against the Cleveland Browns, Henry recorded
five receptions for 113 yards, while he recorded two touchdowns the next
week against the Pittsburgh Steelers. In the season finale against the
Steelers, Henry totaled 124 yards off of four receptions and scored one
touchdown.
Henry was suspended for eight games in 2007 for
violating the NFL's personal conduct policy. He returned in week 10 against
the Baltimore Ravens, where he had four receptions for 99 yards. In the
following loss to Arizona, Henry totaled eight receptions for 81 yards
and one touchdown. Henry finished the season with 21 receptions for 343
yards and two touchdowns.
Following his arrest in April 2008, Henry was waived
by the Bengals. President Mike Brown explained that Henry had forfeited
his opportunity to pursue a career with the Bengals and that his conduct
could no longer be tolerated.
Return to Cincinnati
On April 7, 2008, ESPN radio analyst and former player Michael Irvin said
he took a phone call from Henry, discussing "cleaning up his act",
much like Irvin encouraged Adam "Pacman" Jones to do.[15] Henry
and Jones were teammates at West Virginia, and both served NFL suspensions
imposed by NFL commissioner Roger Goodell during the 2007 NFL season.
With Bengals receivers Chad Ochocinco,
T. J. Houshmandzadeh, and Andre Caldwell nursing injuries during the 2008
preseason, Henry was re-signed to a two-year contract by the Bengals on
August 18.[16] The move came less than a month after Bengals head coach
Marvin Lewis stated the team had no interest in bringing back Henry.[17]
After serving his four-game suspension to begin the 2008 season, Henry
was activated from the exemption list on October 4. Running back Kenny
Watson was released to make room for Henry on the roster. Henry finished
the 2008 season with 19 receptions for 220 yards and two touchdowns. He
was placed on injured reserve in November 2009, after suffering a broken
forearm while making a 20-yard reception against the Baltimore Ravens.
Personal
At the time of his death, Henry was
engaged to Loleini Tonga, the driver of the vehicle involved in the accident
that caused his death. Tonga has three children by Henry.
Off-the-field problems
On December 15, 2005, Henry was pulled over in northern Kentucky for speeding.
During a search, marijuana was found in his shoes. He was also driving
without a valid driver's license or valid insurance.[19] He pleaded guilty
and avoided a jail sentence.
One month later, on January 30, 2006 he was arrested
in Orlando, Florida for multiple gun charges including concealment and
aggravated assault with a firearm.[20] He was reported to have been wearing
his #15 Bengals jersey at the time of his arrest. He pleaded guilty to
this charge and avoided jail time.
On April 29, Henry allowed three underage females
(ages 18, 16 and 15) to consume alcohol at a hotel in Covington, Kentucky.[21]
One of the three, an 18-year-old woman, accused Henry of sexually assaulting
her; she later retracted her story and was charged with filing a false
police report.[22] On January 25, 2007, Henry pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor
violation of a city ordinance commonly referred to as a "keg law."
He was sentenced to 90 days in jail, with all but two of those days being
suspended.[21]
He was pulled over on Interstate 275 in Ohio on
June 3 at 1:18 A.M. by Ohio Highway Patrol trooper Michael Shimko for
surmised drunk driving. He voluntarily submitted to a breathalyzer test
at 2:06 A.M. at the Milford Police Department and registered a .092 blood-alcohol
level, .012 above the level permitted in the state of Ohio.[23]
On October 6, he was suspended by the NFL for two
games for violating the league's personal conduct and substance abuse
policies. NFL policies forbade Henry from taking part in practices, however,
he was allowed to attend any team meetings. Henry missed the Bengals'
October 15, 2006 game at Tampa Bay and their October 22, 2006 home game
versus Carolina.[24]
The following April, Henry was suspended for the
first eight games of the 2007 NFL season for violations of the NFL's personal
conduct policy.[12] His suspension on the 10th came with a stern warning
that future misconduct may result in the end of his career with the NFL.
Henry was given permission by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell to begin
practicing fully.[25] His suspension was lifted and he played in the November
11, 2007 game versus the Baltimore Ravens, amassing 4 catches for 99 yards.
Henry allegedly assaulted a valet attendant at
Newport on the Levee in Newport, Kentucky on November 6, 2007.[26] He
was arrested for a second time in Orlando on December 3 for violating
his probation he was on from a January 30, 2006 arrest. On February 21,
2008, he was found not guilty.
On March 31, 2008, Henry punched a man named Gregory
Meyer, 18, and threw a beer bottle through the window of his car. Henry
claimed it was a case of mistaken identity and also that he thought it
was somebody else that owed him money.[27] Henry was waived by the Bengals
a day after this arrest and was then served a house arrest sentence.
Death
On December 16, 2009, Henry was involved
in a car accident in Charlotte, North Carolina, where he sustained grave
injuries. Charlotte police stated that Henry fell out of the back of a
moving truck driven by his fiancee, Loleini Tonga, while they were engaged
in a domestic dispute. On December 17, 2009, Charlotte police announced
that Henry had died at 6:36 a.m. ET. On December 19, police confirmed
that Henry died of blunt force trauma to the head. No charges have been
filed against his fiancee by this date, but neither has she been cleared
by the police. To honor Henry, every game of Week 15 (December 17-21)
in the NFL began with a moment of silence before kickoff.
"Our football team, what they're feeling yesterday
and this morning ... they watched a guy mature as a young man and work
through adversity," -Lewis
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