Statement from police exonerating Lucky Whitehead

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[Editor’s note: The Prince William County, Virginia police have issued a statement regarding former Cowboys receiver Lucky Whitehead. The full statement appears below.]

“Upon reviewing the June 22, 2017 arrest of an individual named ‘Rodney Darnell Whitehead, Jr.’, the police department is confident that the man charged with petit larceny, and who is subsequently being sought on an active warrant for failure to appear in court, is not Lucky Whitehead of the Dallas Cowboys. The man charged on the morning of June 22 was not in possession of identification at the time of the encounter; however, did verbally provide identifying information to officers, which included a name, date of birth, and social security number matching that of Rodney Darnell Whitehead, Jr.

“Officers then checked this information through the Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) database. The DMV photo on file was then used to compare to the man who was in custody. Officers acted in good faith that, at the time, the man in custody was the same man matching the information provided. At this point, the police department is also confident in confirming that Mr. Whitehead’s identity was falsely provided to police during the investigation. The police department is currently seeking the identity of the man involved in the incident. Since the identifying information provided by the arrestee during the investigation was apparently false, the police department is working with the Prince William County Commonwealth Attorney’s Office to clear Mr. Whitehead from this investigation. The police department regrets the impact these events had on Mr. Whitehead and his family.”

20 responses to “Statement from police exonerating Lucky Whitehead

  1. The layman statement from the Prince William County Police Department reads:

    “Ok…. so we may have cost you your million dollar job on a simple mix up. Please don’t try to make those millions back by suing the pants off of our organization. No?

    Did we say pretty please?”

  2. Doing really dumb, short-sided stuff like this is truly why the Cowboys are ‘America’s Team’.

    Now more than ever.

  3. So one of the few non-felons on the team gets canned. Must be a lack of leadership potential.

    Should be an open and shut law suit.

  4. So if I get arrested without ID I can give someone else’s information and be let go?
    Since an arrest would cause questions for future job interviews this seems like it’s worth trying.

  5. magnumpimustache says:
    Jerry Jones has reviewed all the evidence in Zeke’s case but not this one?

    Zeke wasn’t said to be wanted by police smart guy

  6. Blaming the police for him being cut is dumb, at best. This is all on Jones. He made a rash decision w/o knowing the facts. It’s all his fault. I hope Whitehead signs within the division and dominates the overrated Cowboys.

  7. So when the news first broke, everyone was bashing Jerry for not cutting Whitehead. And talking serious crap on the player. Now, you same people bash him for cutting Whitehead.

  8. Nothing to see here, folks. It’s just another “We have no idea who we arrested and who we are putting in jail on a daily basis” kind of story.

  9. Damn shame! Wonder if “Lucky’ has any legal recourse against the real perp! Even if he does, I doubt any judgement would compensate him at the level of his Cowboys contract.

  10. This actually will end up working out in his favor. He wasn’t going to make the team anyway losing his spot to Ryan Switzer. Now he can have a fresh start with a different team and have a complete training camp to get ready.

  11. stoneydog1000 says:
    Jul 25, 2017 12:41 PM
    In other words they’re saying-“all black guys look the same to us”.

    —————-

    “Officers then checked this information through the Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) database. The DMV photo on file was then used to compare to the man who was in custody. Officers acted in good faith that, at the time, the man in custody was the same man matching the information provided. At this point, the police department is also confident in confirming that Mr. Whitehead’s identity was falsely provided to police during the investigation.

    I don’t reckon I can add anything else.

  12. Option B: he really did do the crime, but bribed somebody to say it was mistaken identity. Who else would have his social security number memorized?

  13. mdve: Reading comprehension is a beautiful thing!

    “Officers then checked this information through the Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) database. The DMV photo on file was then used to compare to the man who was in custody.

    Learn how to read before commenting!

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