The former LSU recipient and the traction of 2025, Kyren Lacy, died last weekend last weekend. The incident occurred on the weekend before a great jury was to hear evidence concerning an automobile accident in December 2024 which had of Lacy accused of success and homicide negligence as part of the death of Herman Hall, 78.
Friday, the Rocky Arceneaux agent published a statement concerning the situation.
“I dealt with this loss in private with the family and relatives of Kyren and with their permission, I would like to share the following,” said Arceneaux. “Kyren was a special talent, but an even better person. In December, Alliance had the chance to welcome Kyren to our family. His contagious personality and his love of life affected everyone positively. Staff and customers.
“He loved football. The fact that it was also going to be a way to support his family meant even more. His family was his everything.
“As his lawyer said, there was a high probability that the accusation of negligence crime would have been refused by a large jury last Monday. Kyren was at the heart of Mr. Hall’s tragic loss. He was willing to join all civil affairs, regardless of the great jury’s decision.
“It is up to you, ashamed of you to revoke Kyren’s combination invitation without recognition or consideration of the facts. I urge you to reassess your processes and provide athletes with the regular procedure necessary before alienating them more from their peers and dreams to load someone to investigate.
“K2 – You should have had the chance to reach your dream of playing in the NFL, in just a week. It is bad that pressure, public perception, intimidation of social media – all without the facts – were too necessary.
With regard to personal conduct policy, the NFL takes no punitive measure (the league insists that paid holidays are not a punishment) until the underlying criminal case has been resolved. In the case of unresolved accusations against players who have not yet been written, the NFL can do what it wants. And to jump a player to attend the combination is absolutely considered a punishment.
If the NFL should prohibit a player from attending the combination due to an unresolved criminal allegation is a different problem. Young men who face criminal accusations, who are innocent until the eyes of the law perhaps deserves a little more NFL.
The problem is that, because players who have not yet been written are not in the NFL Players Association, they have no protection under the NFL collective agreement.
No one will know if Lacy would still be alive if he had attended the combine harvester. The fact is that at a time when a player faces an important degree of stress of criminal accusations and all that is associated with them, each additional negative development adds to the complicated assortment of stressors that could push it over the edge. This makes it more than reasonable that the NFL wonders if the same deference that applies to its current players who face criminal charges should also be granted to its potential players.