Skip navigation
Favorites
Sign up to follow your favorites on all your devices.
Sign up

Will Smith’s wife files wrongful death lawsuit against Cardell Hayes

New Orleans Saints v St. Louis Rams

ST. LOUIS - SEPTEMBER 26: Will Smith #91 of the New Orleans Saints watches from the sidelines against the St. Louis Rams during the forth quarter of the game at the Edward Jones Dome on September 26, 2004 in St. Louis, Missouri. The Saints would go on to win the game 28-25 in overtime. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

Getty Images

The second phase of legal action arising from the shooting death of Saints defensive end Will Smith has begun.

Cardell Hayes, already convicted of manslaughter in connection with the incident that left Smith dead and his wife shot in the leg, has been sued by Will Smith’s estate and by Raquel Smith. The lawsuit also names the insurance companies providing coverage to the cars that Hayes and Will Smith were driving.

Other lawsuits have been filed as the one-year anniversary of the incident approaches. Richard Hernandez and his wife, who were riding in the car with Will and Racquel Smith, have filed suit against Hayes and Will Smith’s estate. Jonathan Whipple, who was driving a car that was rear-ended in a chain reaction after Hayes slammed his vehicle into Smith’s, also has sued.

Civil lawsuits are routine in car accidents, but the added element of a confrontation that led to gunfire, mayhem, and death will make it a little more difficult to wedge the events with the boundaries of insurance coverage. The fact that the lawsuits are being filed just before the Louisiana deadline for doing so suggests that any efforts to settle the insurance claims before going to court have failed.