1. #1
    bigboydan
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    Alabama booster killed after bloody struggle

    boy, you bama fans sure do take football to the extreme

    Alabama booster killed after bloody struggle
    April 11, 2006

    MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - An Alabama booster convicted of bribing a high school coach to get a top recruit for the Crimson Tide was killed in his home after a fierce, bloody struggle, police said Tuesday.

    Police had not confirmed the body was that of Logan Young, but his defense attorney said it was the 65-year-old Memphis resident.

    Police were not sure how he was killed, but investigators found ``a lot of blood,'' police Sgt. Vince Higgins said.

    ``The nature of the attack was brutal,'' Higgins said. ``The entire house is a crime scene.''

    Higgins said there were signs of a struggle in the house, a two-story stone Tudor home in one of Memphis' most exclusive country club neighborhoods.

    Investigators don't know a motive or if the attack was related to Young's federal conviction, Higgins said. Police haven't determined how his home was entered or how many attackers there might have been.

    While police waited for fingerprints and dental records to identify the body, Nashville defense attorney Jim Neal confirmed the victim was Young.

    ``I've had two or three calls about it, all to the same end, found killed in his home. ... I heard that there was blood everywhere,'' Neal said.

    Higgins said Young's housekeeper found the body after she arrived for work Tuesday morning, and the pool boy told police he saw Young as he was leaving the house late Monday.

    ``All we can tell is (the killing) happened sometime overnight - late night or early morning,'' Higgins said.

    Memphis police said there had not been any recent police calls to Young's address before his body was found.

    Young was free pending appeal of his 2005 conviction on money laundering and racketeering conspiracy charges in a federal case involving the recruiting of defensive lineman Albert Means.

    Young was sentenced last June to six months in prison, plus six months' home confinement, then two years' supervised release.

    His attorneys had argued against any jail time because Young needed a kidney transplant and could not get proper medical care in prison. Final briefs in his appeal were to be filed July 14, according to court records.

    Young was the son of a wealthy businessman in Osceola, Ark., and was never a student at Alabama, but he was widely known as the Crimson Tide's most influential booster in Memphis.

    He claimed to be a friend of Alabama coach Paul ``Bear'' Bryant and was the original owner of the Memphis Showboats of the USFL in the early '80s.

    But last year he became one of the first college football boosters ever to be sentenced to federal prison for recruiting violations.

    Former high school coach Lynn Lang, who avoided jail time after pleading guilty to taking part in a racketeering conspiracy, testified against Young, saying the booster paid $150,000 to get Means to sign with Alabama in 2000.

    The NCAA has said it believed Means was unaware his football talents were being brokered. The player later transferred to Memphis, where he finished his college career.

    Lang testified at Young's trial that other universities, including Georgia, Kentucky, Arkansas, Memphis, Mississippi, Michigan State and Tennessee, offered him money or jobs to get Means.

    No charges were filed against anyone with those schools.

    Means' recruitment became part of an NCAA investigation that led to sanctions against Alabama in 2002, costing the Crimson Tide scholarships and bowl appearances.

    Attorney Tommy Gallion, who represented Williams and former Alabama assistant Ronnie Cottrell in a defamation suit against the NCAA and others, called the news tragic.

    Memphis attorney Phillip Shanks was assisting Gallion on the lawsuit in May 2004 when he was attacked in his office and left unconscious. Key case documents were stolen, he said. No one was ever charged in the case.

    ``I have no idea who could be behind this. I was shocked that Phillip Shanks was beaten, and this was more shocking,'' Gallion said in a statement read by his secretary.

    Cottrell said he was horrified when he heard Young had been killed.

    ``I couldn't believe it. Logan was a friend, and he has been through so much already. Certainly for his life to end this way was a tragedy. My prayers are just with his family right now,'' Cottrell said.

    Defense attorney Robert Hutton said he last talked with Young last week and called his death a total shock and a real loss.

    ``He was very generous man. He was generous with people around him. A pastor of a Catholic Church, he asked for money for some program, for the roof or something, and he gave him the money. Logan wasn't even Catholic,'' Hutton said.

    ---

    AP Sports Writers Teresa M. Walker in Nashville and John Zenor in Montgomery, Ala., contributed to this story.

  2. #2
    Razz
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    I shouldn't be amused by this story, but...

  3. #3
    Illusion
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    Son questioned, denies role in Bama booster's death

    MEMPHIS, Tenn. -- Police backed off calling the death of an Alabama football booster a homicide Wednesday, a day after investigators said he died in a fierce, bloody struggle.

    A police statement referred to a continuing "death investigation" and said a ruling from the medical examiner into the cause and manner of death was pending.

    The statement did not explain the change or whether investigators were considering possibilities other than murder. A police spokesman did not return a call Wednesday night.

    Logan Young, who was convicted last year of bribing a high school football coach, was found dead at his Memphis home Tuesday. No arrests had been made and no suspects had been identified.

    "We're still waiting on the medical examiner's report," police Sgt. Vince Higgins said. "And quite frankly, right now, even if she ruled it a murder, we wouldn't have probable cause enough to charge anyone."

    Crime scene crews spent most of two days in Young's house, where police said blood or traces of blood were found in several rooms.

    Young, a 65-year-old multimillionaire and longtime booster of Crimson Tide football, was convicted on federal charges last year of paying a high school coach up to $150,000 to send a top recruit to Alabama.

    The conviction for money laundering and racketeering conspiracy capped a scandal that put Alabama on NCAA probation and cost Young his favored standing among the university's big-money boosters.

    Young had a kidney transplant several months after the trial.

    Young, who was divorced, lived alone much of the time. His son, Logan Young III, an only child, had apparently been staying with him off and on recently, police said.

    Logan Young III was not at the residence when his father's body was found by a housekeeper. He was located several hours later and taken to police headquarters for questioning. There, he voluntarily gave DNA samples to investigators, including fingernail scrapings, said defense lawyer Steve Farese.

    Farese said his client denied any part in the death.

    "He was not involved in any way and found out about it watching television," Farese said.

    On his federal conviction in June, Young was sentenced to six months in prison plus six months' home confinement. He was appealing the conviction and had not yet begun serving the sentence.

    Former high school coach Lynn Lang, who avoided jail time by pleading guilty to conspiracy, said Young paid him thousands of dollars in cash to get defensive lineman Albert Means to sign with Alabama in 2000.

    Means was not accused of wrongdoing. He stayed at Alabama one season before transferring to Memphis.

    Means' recruitment became part of an NCAA investigation that resulted in sanctions against Alabama, and the university announced that Young was no longer welcome as a booster.

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