Bears' Johnson facing numerous gun charges after police raid

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Bears' Johnson facing numerous gun charges after police raid

By Susan Kuczka, Courtney Flynn and John Mullin

Chicago Tribune

(MCT)

CHICAGO - A cache of unregistered guns and assault rifles - some loaded - was found Thursday inside the home of Bears defensive tackle Terry "Tank" Johnson when police raided his house while he was at Halas Hall preparing for Sunday's Tampa Bay game.

The news sent shock waves through Halas Hall, where coach Lovie Smith worried if it would be a distraction to the team's bid for a Super Bowl championship.

Johnson cannot be suspended by the team under the labor agreement, and punishment by the league - a fine and/or a suspension - likely would come only after a conviction, according to an NFL spokesman. But Smith could withhold playing time or make Johnson inactive if he believed it was necessary.

"I'm not going to discipline a guy until I find out what I'm supposed to be disciplining him for," Smith said Thursday.

Attempts to reach Johnson and his agent, Bill Heck, were unsuccessful.

Lake County authorities charged Johnson, 25, with six misdemeanor counts of unlawful possession of a weapon without a Firearm Owner's Identification card. The weapons seized during the raid included a .44 magnum Smith & Wesson revolver, a .50 caliber Desert Eagle handgun, a .45 caliber handgun, a .308 caliber Winchester rifle and two assault-style rifles - a Colt AR-15 and a .223 caliber.

The raid also resulted in the arrest of another man who was living in Johnson's home. Willie B. Posey, 26, was charged with felony possession of marijuana after police found more than 2 ounces of the illegal substance during the raid, authorities said. Posey is being held pending a bond hearing Friday.

Police said the raid was a result of an investigation that began Nov. 4, but declined to elaborate on what triggered the inquiry. Johnson's 25-year-old girlfriend and the couple's two children, ages 3 and 20 months, were at home during the raid, where some of the guns were in plain sight and "a lot" of ammunition was found, police said.

"As far as children being in danger . . . there were loaded weapons and some of them were accessible in the home," Gurnee Police Chief Robert Jones said. "So I think you could draw a conclusion there that yes, they were probably in danger."

If convicted of the charges, Johnson would face a fine. However, the charges could result in the revocation of his probation on a previous gun charge, authorities said.

Thursday's arrest was Johnson's third since the Bears picked him in the second round of the 2004 NFL draft out of the University of Washington.

Johnson posted a $100 bond, which was 10 percent of his $1,000 bond, Thursday night at the Gurnee Police Department after leaving team practice without commenting on the charges. He is scheduled to appear in court Jan. 9 - only days before the Bears will play their first NFC playoff game at Soldier Field.

"Tank's really a good guy and he has worked so hard to do the right things," middle linebacker Brian Urlacher said. "... We'd really miss him if this ends up somehow in him being out. But the main thing I just want him to be OK."

Smith expressed disappointment with what he called a "distraction" for his team as it prepares for Sunday's game at Soldier Field.

"I'm disappointed, of course, that something like this is coming up," Smith said. "We're constantly talking to our players about doing the right thing, and our players do the right thing most of the time."

The Bears already are without one starting defensive tackle because of Tommie Harris' ruptured hamstring injury that sent him to injured reserve for the remainder of the season. Johnson has 20 tackles and 3 1/2 sacks this season.

What, if anything, the NFL may do in the Johnson situation remains to be seen. The league suspended cornerback Ricky Manning Jr. for the Nov. 26 game at New England because of a no-contest plea in a felony assault case but the suspension came months after the incident.

The NFL typically waits until some resolution is reached in legal proceedings and discipline on the matter could stretch into next season.

"This will be reviewed under the terms of the personal conduct policy ... all the facts are relevant including a player's prior history," NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said.

According to the language in the league's personal conduct policy, Aiello explained the NFL is unlikely to suspend Johnson unless he is convicted.

Gurnee police and officers from the Northern Illinois Police Alarm System descended on the home about 11 a.m. with shields and armored vehicles, alarming neighbors, some of whom police had asked to evacuate the neighborhood.

An explosion was heard, rattling neighbors' homes, which police said was used as a diversionary tactic because of the threat of weapons being used during the raid.

"We knew there were weapons in the house ... we also knew there were more than likely people in the house so we did not know what we would encounter," Jones said. "The officers took the necessary precautions for their safety and the safety of the neighborhood."

Johnson's previous skirmishes with the law appeared to have been resolved last March, when prosecutors dropped battery and resisting arrest charges.

Those charges had been filed against Johnson in February when a police officer who scuffled with Johnson outside a Rush Street nightclub refused to proceed with the case, authorities said.

Johnson's February arrest also led to violation of probation charges being filed against him. He had been placed on 18 months' probation in November 2005 after he pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor unlawful gun possession charge in Cook County, authorities said.

The violation of probation charges also were dismissed when the battery case was dropped, although new charges could be filed against Johnson because of his latest arrest, prosecutors said.

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/sports/16245693.htm

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My questions is "with six misdemeanor counts of unlawful possession of a weapon without a Firearm Owner's Identification card"????

I am from Texas....
 
Hopefully he will get charged and draw a lot of attention to our cause. Unfortunately he is not the best example of a gun owner but nonetheless we need to change the law.

Supposedly the police were tipped off in his previous arrest by a valet who saw a handgun in his car. That is what one paper reported. I suspect that is his previous Unlawful Use of a Weapon charge (UUW).

I think if I was caught CCWing I would probably be hit with a felony and not have it reduced to a misdemeanor. But that is only speculation.
 
Here is a columnists opinion...

http://www.suntimes.com/sports/couch/174200,CST-SPT-greg15.article

Message to Bears: Get serious

December 15, 2006
BY GREG COUCH Sun-Times Columnist
Think of it all as one: two unregistered assault rifles, six unregistered guns in all, a police raid, drugs in the house, a toddler and an infant.
Remember that Tank Johnson already was on probation for a gun charge. And in another incident, last February, he was being ticketed for double-parking and things ended up getting heated with the cop, and Johnson allegedly told him: ''You ain't the only one with a Glock. If it wasn't for your gun and your badge, I'd kick your ass.''

The Bears are going to take this seriously, right? And we are, too?

I know, I know. The Bears' defense isn't looking as dominant as it was earlier in the year. And Johnson became an even bigger part of any Super Bowl hopes when fellow defensive tackle Tommie Harris got hurt. But we have to stop putting that sort of thing above everything else.

A toddler, an infant and unregistered assault rifles? Come on. This is a Tank Johnson problem, but also a Bears problem and an NFL problem. Even bigger, athletes and guns have become a sports culture problem.

The Bears, who had the issue last year with Olin Kreutz and Fred Miller and the shooting range, are going to act on this, right?

Johnson was arrested Thursday on six counts of unlawful possession of weapons. In this case, he allegedly had six guns in the house and no registration card. Another man who apparently lives in his house was arrested on a felony charge of marijuana possession.

''It definitely is a concern because Tank has had to deal with some things like this in the past,'' Bears coach Lovie Smith said. ''Yes, it definitely is a concern.''


Why don't they learn?
If the Bears want to make a statement about what's really important, they will not play Johnson. Everything is just alleged now, with no convictions. So the Bears should suspend him with pay, and when the justice system has taken its course, re-evaluate then. Just do it, Smith and general manager Jerry Angelo. I know it hurts. But this isn't just embarrassing; it's important. Take it seriously.
If this all is true, you have to ask: Why doesn't Johnson learn?

I just had a moment of deja vu: Several weeks ago, I asked the same thing about Indiana Pacers guard Stephen Jackson, who had been a big part of the brawl with fans in Detroit. This year, he was arrested after an incident at a strip club that allegedly involved him firing a gun.

NBA commissioner David Stern is so worked up over his league's thug image that he keeps trying new things. He also said he wished players would stop carrying guns. And some people went nuts over this being America and the players' rights.

And then on Thursday, we saw pictures of two small kids being carried out of Johnson's house while police raided it, looking for guns.

Last year, after the Kreutz-Miller thing, I asked Johnson about guns and why he has them.

''I grew up in the desert in Arizona, and guns are looked at there as just another thing,'' he said. ''In Texas, it's like that as well. And in the South.

''It's about having fun. We're not out to harm someone.''

The NBA isn't the only league with trouble. The NFL might be even worse, with some incredible arrests this year for several types of charges. Bears cornerback Ricky Manning Jr. was suspended for a game after pleading no contest to a felony assault charge. He was alleged to have beaten a man in a Los Angeles Denny's.

Eight Cincinnati Bengals and four San Diego Chargers have been arrested this year. And NFL commissioner Roger Goodell called Bengals president Mike Brown on Monday to offer his help.


'Guns are rampant in football'
That wasn't as generous an offer as it sounds. By ''help,'' he was suggesting that the Bengals had better fix things now, or he would take care of it for them. And Goodell already has started to come down with increasingly strict penalties.
Goodell seems to take it seriously.

Four years ago, former NFL player Lomas Brown told the New York Times how startling the league's gun trend had become during his 19-year career. He said players were taking guns onto team flights, into locker rooms, cars, training-camp dorms.

''Just about every guy I played with in the NFL had a gun,'' he said. ''Almost every player I knew had one. Guns are rampant in football. You have all these players packing guns wherever they go. It's a disaster waiting to happen.''

You could say that the news with Johnson wasn't a disaster Thursday. No one got shot.

Charges were dropped from Johnson's earlier battery charge with the police officer. And no one has been convicted yet from Thursday's raid.

Meanwhile, the Bears can really use Johnson now. So they can just blow this off with some harsh-sounding words.

''We're constantly talking to our players about doing the right thing,'' Smith said. ''And [they] do the right thing the majority of the time. But sometimes things like this come up.''

Maybe all that talking isn't enough. The problems keep stacking up. The sports world's, the Bears' and Johnson's, too.

For now, the disaster is still only waiting to happen.


Letters to our sports columnists appear Sunday. Send e-mail to [email protected]. Include your full name, hometown and a daytime phone number

First off in the state of IL guns are not registered. Perhaps in Chicago only but the rest of IL does not register guns in general. There maybe a township or two but overall it is not as common.

Either way who cares if the man had an Assault Rifle? DId he harm anyone with it? This is just another journalist demonizing guns.
 
"two assault-style rifles - a Colt AR-15 and a .223 caliber."
Ain't that usually the same thing? Or can I count my .45 with its ammo as 'two military-style handguns - one a Springfield Armory GI .45 and one a .45 ACP'?
 
My sympathies to all y'all Illini, but politics aside, this guy is simply stupid. The law is well known, how hard is it to get an FOID (onerous though it may be, asssuming he is eligible)?

Typical dumb jock, product of the elitist college/"professional" athletics machine, "I'se special, the rules don't apply to me."

Why don't they learn?

Because Stupid is forever.
 
Yup, when I lived in Ill-annoyed, I grumbled about the FOID, then I obeyed the law.

About three years later, I moved to Texas.

Your choice; choose wisely.
 
Money for good lawyers, stupid laws.

Another example of the death of the Bill of Rights. Luckily for him he has plenty of money for lawyers to fight them. Good luck to him. More celebrities with the press and good lawyers ought to be arrested and charged to help publicize these idiotic and unconstitutional, and IMMORAL laws.

Contrast his money pile with Richard Celera who is being tortured by the BATFE. There's someone who needs a pile of money, the press, and good lawyers.
 
My sympathies to all y'all Illini, but politics aside, this guy is simply stupid. The law is well known, how hard is it to get an FOID (onerous though it may be, asssuming he is eligible)?

Typical dumb jock, product of the elitist college/"professional" athletics machine, "I'se special, the rules don't apply to me."


Quote:
Why don't they learn?

Because Stupid is forever.


Right on target, err so to speak !!!!:D
 
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