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Ex-NFL star Kellen Winslow Jr. on trial for allegedly raping homeless woman, hitchhiker, unconscious

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
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The 54-year-old woman was thumbing a ride on a March afternoon in 2018 when, finally, a boxy black SUV pulled up.

A muscular young man with short curly hair sat behind the wheel, tattooed from his wrists to his shoulders. He agreed to give her a ride toward Encinitas, Calif., just north of San Diego. They made small talk along the way — but then seemingly out of nowhere, his demeanor changed, the woman would later say.

Point blank, he threatened to rape her, and then said, “and if you say anything, I will kill you,” according to prosecutors.

The woman begged to be let out at a 7-Eleven, but it was useless, prosecutors said. The man kept driving, turning into a strip mall parking lot. He ordered her out of the vehicle, prosecutors say. She didn’t run because she was scared, and she didn’t scream either. Behind a fence near the freeway, he started to order her to remove her clothes, prosecutors say, before changing his mind and ordering her back inside his car.

There, he forced her to perform oral sex, and then pinned her against the passenger’s seat and raped her, authorities say.

She reported the alleged attack to police four days later, providing a description of the man — the muscles, the tattoos — but saying she did not know who did this to her.

San Diego prosecutors say they know who it is now: Kellen Winslow II, a former NFL star who lived in a $3 million home in the area, not far from where the hitchhiker met him on the side of the road. Once the highest-paid tight end in the league, raking in more than $40 million over his 10-year career, the 35-year-old Winslow is now on trial as an accused serial rapist.

The trial began Monday, as Winslow’s father, San Diego Chargers Hall of Famer Kellen Winslow, sat behind him. Winslow II is accused of raping the hitchhiker, a 59-year-old homeless woman two months later and an unconscious 17-year-old in 2003 while he was playing football at the University of Miami. He is also accused of exposing himself to a 57-year-old woman while she tended to her garden and a 77-year-old woman as she lounged in a fitness club’s hot tub. The charges in the five cases include rape, forced oral copulation and sodomy, kidnapping and indecent exposure, among others.

If convicted, Winslow could face life in prison — and would join a sordid list of former NFL players, such as Aaron Hernandez and Titus Young, whose bizarre or violent crimes in the aftermath of their careers caused speculation about what role, if any, repeated head trauma contributed to their behavior. Hernandez, for example, who was convicted of murder, was posthumously found to be suffering from chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE, a neurodegenerative disease caused by head trauma.

But the disease can only be diagnosed posthumously, and despite speculation that Winslow’s defense attorneys may introduce evidence regarding the former NFL player’s mental state, they have made no specific claims attempting to link his behavior to football head trauma.

Instead, in an opening statement lasting fewer than 10 minutes on Monday, defense attorney Brian Watkins claimed the “accusers aren’t giving you the whole truth,” and suggested the sex was consensual. He argued Winslow’s only offense was infidelity in his marriage, that his actions were immoral but not criminal.

“Kellen Winslow has been honest from the start, over a year ago,” Watkins said. “He admitted he had consensual sex with those accusers, way back when. He was never dishonest about it.”

Winslow, maintaining his innocence, told NBC San Diego last October, “It’s a money grab. Unfortunately, that’s the society we live in now.”

The stunning set of allegations against Winslow comes six years after he retired from professional football after playing for the Cleveland Browns, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, New England Patriots and New York Jets. The son of divorced parents, Winslow grew up in San Diego with his father before enrolling as a star tight end for the University of Miami in 2001. While a student-athlete there in 2003, he garnered national attention with a rabid locker room interview, where reporters asked if he realized he had injured an opposing player. He said he didn’t care. “It’s war,” he said. “They will kill you. . . . So I’m gonna kill them. . . . I’m a [expletive] soldier!”

That same year, prosecutors now say, he raped an unconscious 17-year-old girl at a house party, while he was at home in San Diego for the summer.

But fearing the consequences, the alleged victim wouldn’t come forward for years, not until seeing the news that Winslow had been arrested on sex crimes charges last June, prosecutor Bill Owens said Monday.

In the meantime, Winslow was selected No. 6 overall drafted by the Cleveland Browns in 2004, spending five seasons there before bouncing around the league. He avoided trouble for the most part, but reports later emerged that he was suspected of masturbating inside his car in a Target parking lot, shocking a woman who saw him. She declined to press charges, and Winslow denied the allegations.

Winslow did not return to the Jets after the 2013 season, in which he violated the NFL’s policy on performance-enhancing substances. He went on to live quietly with his wife in Encinitas, Calif., in an enormous ranch home with a six-car garage that looked like a big red barn.

Then, in 2018, the police reports started piling up.

The hitchhiker’s allegations came first. Two months later, a homeless woman reported to police that a man matching Winslow’s description, driving a similar car, raped her on the side of a road.

The 59-year-old woman said she had known the alleged rapist as an acquaintance. He had been nice to her, offering her food and money and rides on several occasions after seeing her on the streets. Once, Owens said, he even offered her $50 for sex. But she had said no, Owens said.

One evening in May, however, the man she allegedly knew as “Kevin” rolled up in his black Hummer at a train station where she was sitting with friends. He asked if she would like to get a cup of coffee, Owens said, and this time the homeless woman decided to take him up on the offer.

But instead of coffee, Owens said, the man drove her to a remote location, pulled over, pulled her out of the vehicle by her wrists and raped her anally in the dirt along the roadside. She screamed, so then he choked her, Owens said.

“He left her on the side of the road, and she walked all the way, through the night, to coastal Encinitas,” Owens said. “She was afraid he was going to come after her, she was afraid she was going to find her, and so she went and sat in a taco shop by herself.”

Police, who knew the famous football player lived in the area, began investigating him based on the information provided by the women. Two others, ages 71 and 86, also came forward to identify him as the suspect who broke into their home. And just weeks after the alleged May rape, a 57-year-old woman called police to report that a man riding a bike and matching Winslow’s description approached her while she was tending to flowers in her yard — and dropped his pants to expose himself.

Police pulled him over and obtained a sample of his DNA on June 7, Owens said. It matched the profile of the semen found on the hitchhiker’s pants, he said.

Owens said Winslow then had his Hummer detailed and promptly sold it, which Owens described as an attempt to cover up any evidence. The women’s DNA was not found in the vehicle, he said, although Winslow’s sperm was. A bike matching the one the 57-year-old gardener described to police was found in Winslow’s home, Owens said. He was arrested June 14, prompting the fourth accuser to come forward.

“Kellen Winslow is a man who has been given much,” said Owens. “He reached the top heights of his profession. He reportedly has earned $40 million himself as a football player. He was born the son of a man who himself had achieved great heights in his profession. ... But it was not enough for Mr. Winslow to be given what he had in life. Instead he took from these women.”

This past March, prosecutors say, while Winslow was out on bail, he exposed himself to a 77-year-old woman in a hot tub at a fitness center, masturbating while sitting next to her.

He has remained jailed without bail since then.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/nati...eless-hitchhiker-teen/?utm_term=.c97775f613ec
 
He must have CTE -why else go after old ladies with you have his money, name and physique?
IIRC his old man is a bigot so maybe his hated rubbed off on him too.
 
I feel stupid for not knowing he had been accused, let alone already at trial. Not getting any national pub really.

In either case, yikes. Pretty vicious stuff.
 
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This is so got dam confusing. I thought I understood different kinks and urges... but for a young good looking rich professional athlete to pass on group sex with supermodels that I'm certain he could have... for rape of old homeless women who are likely dirty.......... well I'm at a loss.

Not to minimize the crimes, this dude should burn, but... I mean... wtf?
 
He probably has PTSD, he is a Fn solja.
Yeah, that is what I first thought of. His rant about being a soldier.
Unless the CTE set in hen he was college, then he's always been a predator.
 
This is so got dam confusing. I thought I understood different kinks and urges... but for a young good looking rich professional athlete to pass on group sex with supermodels that I'm certain he could have... for rape of old homeless women who are likely dirty.......... well I'm at a loss.

Not to minimize the crimes, this dude should burn, but... I mean... wtf?

Sense of power/domination. Easy victim; homeless women are at high risk of violent crimes.

That Oklahoma officer (Holtzclaw)...he targeted poor black women with police records, some with warrants, because there was a low chance they'd report it and risk getting into trouble themselves.
 
I mean, I like an older cougar as much as the next guy, but this is just.... bizarre.
 
One thing is for sure, we are never going to have to worry about this idiot dying from a brain tumor.
 
Sense of power/domination. Easy victim; homeless women are at high risk of violent crimes.

That Oklahoma officer (Holtzclaw)...he targeted poor black women with police records, some with warrants, because there was a low chance they'd report it and risk getting into trouble themselves.

It's.

Not.

About.

Having.

An.

Old.

Woman.

Fetish.

He's a scumbag who needed to dominate easy targets.
I understand. That desire is even harder for me to understand that a desire for old women. It's sickening..
 
Such a shame he came from an underprivileged home. His father was only an All-Pro tight end who is only worth just north of $10 million. So sad his son did what he had to do to survive. It’s the system, man, the system.
 
Not to pick on you specifically, but the whole concept of prison rape comes up over and over. Why encourage this? Why wish it on someone?

I am not really encouraging it. It's unfortunate that it is a part of prison life, but considering that rape is the reason he's going to be there, it's sure ironic.
 
Not to pick on you specifically, but the whole concept of prison rape comes up over and over. Why encourage this? Why wish it on someone?

Exactly. Wishing for someone to be brutally tortured is what they are encouraging. We need to move beyond prison and hey, lets torture the person too while we are at it.
 
Exactly. Wishing for someone to be brutally tortured is what they are encouraging. We need to move beyond prison and hey, lets torture the person too while we are at it.
Feel free to die on the hill of defending an NFL sized man taking advantage of a person in need all you want.

Well, after the threads yesterday where children were murdered by their parents and the subsequent discussion of the perpetrators, I took away that the punishment should fit the crime.
 
Nobody's doing such a thing. If he dies a slow, painful death, so be it. If he spends the rest of his life in prison, fantastic. I'm just not going to wish rape upon anyone.
Might want to take a gander at Purdue's response. With rape, molestation, or theft I am all for an eye for an eye.
 
Nobody's doing such a thing. If he dies a slow, painful death, so be it. If he spends the rest of his life in prison, fantastic. I'm just not going to wish rape upon anyone.

I think there is a difference between wishing it on someone and not shedding a tear if it happens to him.
 
Kellen Jr. has been nothign but trouble (and an outstanding FB talent) ever since his Miami days. But damn....he just was never worth the problems he created...as a Brown it got so bad even they dropped him.....I wonder if he might not be a CTE victim? He sure is messed up.
 

Ex-NFL star Kellen Winslow II expresses remorse from prison, seeks reduced sentence​



SAN DIEGO – Former Cleveland Browns tight end Kellen Winslow II has expressed remorse for his actions and declared that he is committed to being a “productive person” as part of his latest bid to get his prison sentence reduced according to new state criminal justice reform laws.
The former NFL first-round draft pick also described his life in prison and cited previous trauma he suffered, including sexual abuse as a youth, an estimated 100 concussions in his football career dating to high school and a motorcycle accident in 2005 that led to depression.
He put this in writing to go along with a new petition filed last week with a state appeals court in California, a copy of which was obtained by USA TODAY Sports. He also has hired a new lawyer to work on it after being denied by a Superior Court judge in 2023, when Winslow didn’t have counsel and submitted his arguments in handwriting.

“I am committed to being a productive person when released, and I will always feel remorse for what I did to the victims in my case,” Winslow said in a signed declaration attached to his new habeas corpus petition.
Kellen Winslow II

Kellen Winslow II

What did Kellen Winslow II do?​

Winslow, 41, was sentenced to 14 years in prison in 2021 after being convicted of horrific sex crimes against five women in San Diego County, including the rape of a woman who was unconscious in 2003 and the rape of a homeless woman in 2018. All of the crimes for which he was convicted came against women who were disadvantaged, incapacitated or in their mid-50s or older. One victim was a hitchhiker he picked up in 2018. Another was a 77-year-old woman at a local gym.
His new petition cites state laws that would have changed the sentencing analysis in his case, leading to a more favorable sentence, according to his petition.
“Petitioner (Winslow) is not asking to be released from prison at this time, but he does meet the criteria for relief under AB 124, given the trauma (brain damage) he received in his life of football, physical and sexual abuse he was subjected to as a child, and the impact of his debilitating motorcycle accident,” said his new petition submitted by Patrick Morgan Ford in San Diego.

What is Kellen Winslow II’s goal here?​

Winslow, who also starred at the University of Miami, has been incarcerated since March 2019 and currently resides at a state prison in Norco, Calif. He is not eligible for parole until September 2028, according to state records.
Winslow “asks this court to grant his writ and return the case to the trial court so that he may be sentenced in accordance with the new laws,” his new petition states. “He now presents his arguments (with facts not available originally) to this court by way of a petition for a writ of habeas corpus.”
The petition cites AB 124, which became law in 2021. It is intended to help criminal defendants who previously experienced “psychological, physical, or childhood trauma, including, but not limited to, abuse, neglect, exploitation, or sexual violence.”
AB 124 requires the court to impose a lower term of sentencing if the defendant has experienced such trauma, unless there are aggravating circumstances. The petition also argues that plea agreements are not insulated from legislative changes designed to lower sentences.
In February 2021, Winslow had agreed to his 14-year sentence in a negotiated plea deal with prosecutors at the San Diego County District Attorney’s Office. That office declined comment on Winslow’s new petition.

What trauma did Winslow cite?​

To establish the law’s relevance to his own case, Winslow cited various forms of trauma he’s experienced going back to childhood.
He mentioned his football career, during which he earned about $40 million. He played high school football in San Diego, where his father Kellen Winslow Sr. was a star tight end for the San Diego Chargers before also citing issues with brain injuries.
"I probably suffered 100 concussions during that time, but I knew not to report them because a reported concussion would show you were 'damaged goods' and that could be held against a player when negotiating a contract,” Winslow II said in his declaration.
He said each collision was “like a small car accident” that led to migraine headaches and depression.
He said his motorcycle accident in 2005 led to depression.
“I started to become a different, and less caring person during that time,” he wrote.
He then described childhood issues that affected him and said he was sexually abused by two relatives.
“I feel this somehow played a role in my own sex crimes in the present case,” he wrote.

What does Winslow say about life in prison?​

Winslow previously had been reluctant to express guilt or remorse. When USA TODAY Sports asked him last year about the victims, he said he couldn't “speak to my innocence right now.” After previously insisting he was innocent, he also hesitated to plead guilty in 2019 but did so to avoid the risk of life in prison.
In his new declaration, he said his prison life includes reading the Bible and self-help books, receiving counseling and also running and training for marathons with other inmates.
“My goal was to become a better man and one day reunite with my wife, who stood by me for a long time, and my two children,” Winslow wrote.
His wife filed for divorce in 2019 after a jury first convicted him of some charges.
His petition notes that other inmates have sent letters expressing their gratitude to him for his help. One called him a “positive light in this place.” Another credits Winslow II with his drug addiction recovery and wrote that “the Creator sent him to me to better myself.”
“He is actively programming in prison and is described by the director of his Anger Management class as a role model to other participants in the group,” his petition states.
It’s not clear when the court will take up his case.
 

Ex-NFL star Kellen Winslow II expresses remorse from prison, seeks reduced sentence​



SAN DIEGO – Former Cleveland Browns tight end Kellen Winslow II has expressed remorse for his actions and declared that he is committed to being a “productive person” as part of his latest bid to get his prison sentence reduced according to new state criminal justice reform laws.
The former NFL first-round draft pick also described his life in prison and cited previous trauma he suffered, including sexual abuse as a youth, an estimated 100 concussions in his football career dating to high school and a motorcycle accident in 2005 that led to depression.
He put this in writing to go along with a new petition filed last week with a state appeals court in California, a copy of which was obtained by USA TODAY Sports. He also has hired a new lawyer to work on it after being denied by a Superior Court judge in 2023, when Winslow didn’t have counsel and submitted his arguments in handwriting.

“I am committed to being a productive person when released, and I will always feel remorse for what I did to the victims in my case,” Winslow said in a signed declaration attached to his new habeas corpus petition.
Kellen Winslow II

Kellen Winslow II

What did Kellen Winslow II do?​

Winslow, 41, was sentenced to 14 years in prison in 2021 after being convicted of horrific sex crimes against five women in San Diego County, including the rape of a woman who was unconscious in 2003 and the rape of a homeless woman in 2018. All of the crimes for which he was convicted came against women who were disadvantaged, incapacitated or in their mid-50s or older. One victim was a hitchhiker he picked up in 2018. Another was a 77-year-old woman at a local gym.
His new petition cites state laws that would have changed the sentencing analysis in his case, leading to a more favorable sentence, according to his petition.
“Petitioner (Winslow) is not asking to be released from prison at this time, but he does meet the criteria for relief under AB 124, given the trauma (brain damage) he received in his life of football, physical and sexual abuse he was subjected to as a child, and the impact of his debilitating motorcycle accident,” said his new petition submitted by Patrick Morgan Ford in San Diego.

What is Kellen Winslow II’s goal here?​

Winslow, who also starred at the University of Miami, has been incarcerated since March 2019 and currently resides at a state prison in Norco, Calif. He is not eligible for parole until September 2028, according to state records.
Winslow “asks this court to grant his writ and return the case to the trial court so that he may be sentenced in accordance with the new laws,” his new petition states. “He now presents his arguments (with facts not available originally) to this court by way of a petition for a writ of habeas corpus.”
The petition cites AB 124, which became law in 2021. It is intended to help criminal defendants who previously experienced “psychological, physical, or childhood trauma, including, but not limited to, abuse, neglect, exploitation, or sexual violence.”
AB 124 requires the court to impose a lower term of sentencing if the defendant has experienced such trauma, unless there are aggravating circumstances. The petition also argues that plea agreements are not insulated from legislative changes designed to lower sentences.
In February 2021, Winslow had agreed to his 14-year sentence in a negotiated plea deal with prosecutors at the San Diego County District Attorney’s Office. That office declined comment on Winslow’s new petition.

What trauma did Winslow cite?​

To establish the law’s relevance to his own case, Winslow cited various forms of trauma he’s experienced going back to childhood.
He mentioned his football career, during which he earned about $40 million. He played high school football in San Diego, where his father Kellen Winslow Sr. was a star tight end for the San Diego Chargers before also citing issues with brain injuries.
"I probably suffered 100 concussions during that time, but I knew not to report them because a reported concussion would show you were 'damaged goods' and that could be held against a player when negotiating a contract,” Winslow II said in his declaration.
He said each collision was “like a small car accident” that led to migraine headaches and depression.
He said his motorcycle accident in 2005 led to depression.
“I started to become a different, and less caring person during that time,” he wrote.
He then described childhood issues that affected him and said he was sexually abused by two relatives.
“I feel this somehow played a role in my own sex crimes in the present case,” he wrote.

What does Winslow say about life in prison?​

Winslow previously had been reluctant to express guilt or remorse. When USA TODAY Sports asked him last year about the victims, he said he couldn't “speak to my innocence right now.” After previously insisting he was innocent, he also hesitated to plead guilty in 2019 but did so to avoid the risk of life in prison.
In his new declaration, he said his prison life includes reading the Bible and self-help books, receiving counseling and also running and training for marathons with other inmates.
“My goal was to become a better man and one day reunite with my wife, who stood by me for a long time, and my two children,” Winslow wrote.
His wife filed for divorce in 2019 after a jury first convicted him of some charges.
His petition notes that other inmates have sent letters expressing their gratitude to him for his help. One called him a “positive light in this place.” Another credits Winslow II with his drug addiction recovery and wrote that “the Creator sent him to me to better myself.”
“He is actively programming in prison and is described by the director of his Anger Management class as a role model to other participants in the group,” his petition states.
It’s not clear when the court will take up his case.
Eff him. I hope he dies in a fire and if there is a hell, he spends eternity there in agonizing pain.
 
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