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Police Say Dead Body Found In NFL Player's Basement Was A Homicide

Police said they were investigating the dead body found in New York Giants' Janoris Jenkins' basement as a homicide.

Fair Lawn, NJ – A dead body was found early Tuesday morning at the home of New York Giants cornerback Janoris Jenkins.

ESPN reported that the police were treating the scene as a homicide investigation. The police believe the death was likely due to strangulation or suffocation, NFL.com reported.

"The deceased is not the owner of the residence, but the identity of the male decedent cannot be released until next of kin have been notified," Bergen County Prosecutor Dennis Calo told ESPN.

Jenkins was not in residence when the body was discovered in his basement by a maintenance worker. He has been in in Florida since the end of the Giants minicamp two weeks ago, EPSN reported.

The Pro Bowl player had initially wanted to return to New Jersey on Tuesday to deal with the investigation, but later changed his plans on the advice of his attorneys, ESPN reported in an interesting series of tweets.

Calo said the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office Major Crimes Unit and the Fair Lawn Police Department were running the investigation.

The New York Giants released a statement that said they were “aware of and monitoring the situation,” according to KABC-TV.

Jenkins, who has a knack for returning interceptions for touchdowns, signed a five-year, $62 million contract with the New York Giants in May.

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Hi_estComnDenomn
Hi_estComnDenomn

@LEO0301 Deflection. Nice.

Hi_estComnDenomn
Hi_estComnDenomn

@LEO0301 Well thank you for backing up what i said, that CTE should continue to be researched because it's a bigger problem than the NFL.

LEO0301
LEO0301

@Hi_estComnDenomn - Most people who get CTE are involved in sports that involve repetitive head trauma. In other words it's totally avoidable to the largest percentage of people who deal with this issue.

"Every person diagnosed with CTE has one thing in common: a history of repetitive hits to the head.1 CTE is most often found in contact sport athletes and military veterans, likely because these are some of the only roles in modern life that involve purposeful, repetitive hits to the head. CTE has been found in individuals whose primary exposure to head impacts was through tackle football (200+ cases confirmed at the VA-BU-CLF Brain Bank), the military (25+ cases), hockey (20+ cases), boxing (15+ cases, 50+ globally), rugby (5+ cases), soccer (5+ cases, 10+ globally), pro wrestling (5+ cases), and, in fewer than three cases each, baseball, basketball, intimate partner violence, and individuals with developmental disorders who engaged in head banging behaviors."

Hi_estComnDenomn
Hi_estComnDenomn

@RichardKurtz Was your response just backing mine up?

Marxest
Marxest

CTE affects athletes and veteran. Yes, those same veterans that some of you claim to hold so dear. We must learn all that we can to prevent it or treat it. As for the body, we must wait for the autopsy and the visitor before jumping to conclusions. The owner may not have been around when the in person expired.

Richard Kurtz
Richard Kurtz

Yea, no shit. I am quite sure more Veterans suffer from CTE than NFL players, but who cares about them...(dripping with sarcasm)

No. 11-20
Hi_estComnDenomn
Hi_estComnDenomn

@LEO0301 so doctors shouldn't continue research on a concussive disease that affects veterans and battered wives and children?

Alright.

LEO0301
LEO0301

@Hi_estComnDenomn - I know a cure for CTE - don't play a sport where your brain is continually subjected to punishment. That won't happen though. There is too much money at stake and the players, even when there is evidence to believe they will suffer from CTE, will still play the game. Sorry, don't waste tax payer money researching this medical issue. The cure is not to play football.

Pilot350
Pilot350

Will the NFL kneel for this one?