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Bears DT Facing Gun Chargers

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Seems odd that they would search his house in the first place. If he was arrested or found at fault for having legal guns in his home loaded or not then lord knows most of us on this board would face time for the shit that they could find in ours.
 
I would have some loaded guns laying around my house too if my body guard was just recently gunned down.

I would be wondering if I was next.
 
kev, the body guard was killed last night...
 
This is just me talking but what good is an unloaded gun? I know kids are in the house but if they are secure or in a place the kids can't get to then why does it have to be unloaded?
 
Dont know if anyone watched the game...but Tank was playing, how the hell he is not in jail and is out on the field is beyonf me.
 
His name is Tank...do you expect him to be packing SuperSoakers with H20 in them? You don't name your son Tank if you want him being a well respected functioning member of society..

Clearly this guy has watched Scarface a few too many times and seems prepared to last the final 5:00 minutes..in which Tony Montana does not..
 
Tank Johnson is going to be doing 4 months in jail, great job by the judicial system to not let this POS off the hook because he is an athlete, hopefully this serves as an example to others in the NFL, and hopefully Pac Man is prosecuted the same way. Sorry, but when you got guns in the house, and have other gun charges...you cant just let things like that slide.

SKOKIE, Ill. -- Chicago Bears defensive lineman Tank Johnson was sentenced Thursday to four months in jail for violating probation in a 2005 gun case.


Johnson




Johnson immediately was taken into custody. He could have been sentenced to up to a year behind bars.

Johnson, who pleaded guilty to violating his probation, also must pay a $2,500 fine.

Johnson was arrested on misdemeanor weapons charges Dec. 14 after police raided his home in the Lake County town of Gurnee, about 40 miles northwest of Chicago, and found six unregistered firearms.

At the time, he was on probation in a November 2005 Cook County case. In that case, he'd pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge stemming from an arrest in which a nightclub valet reported seeing Johnson with a handgun in his sport utility vehicle.

Johnson's lawyers said they had not yet decided whether to appeal the ruling, but suggested the football player's celebrity influenced the sentence.

"This sentence was unnecessarily harsh," defense attorney Lorna Propes said. "It's pretty unheard of for these circumstances."

Prosecutor Rick Cenar called the sentence "fair and appropriate."

Dressed in a gray suit, Johnson arrived at the courtroom Thursday with coach Lovie Smith and All-Pro linebacker Brian Urlacher, who testified on Johnson's behalf.

"Tank knows he's in a situation where he can't get into any other trouble," Smith said, adding jail time would be "devastating" for the player's career. "And he's let me know there won't be any more."

Before he was sentenced Johnson pleaded with Cook County Circuit Judge John Moran for leniency.

"Your honor, I don't believe I'm a man who belongs in jail," he said.

But Cenar said jail time was appropriate.

"Just because he's a professional football player and plays for the Chicago Bears, doesn't put him above the law," Cenar said.

Moran also sentenced Johnson to 84 days in-home confinement, which he already has served.

Johnson's bodyguard, Willie B. Posey, was arrested on felony drug charges after the raid on Johnson's home. Posey was shot and killed two days later during an early morning fight while he and Johnson were at a nightclub in Chicago.

The Bears suspended Johnson for one game for being out at the club.

He has been under house arrest since the raid, but was permitted to attend practice and travel to Miami for the Super Bowl, where the Indianapolis Colts beat the Chicago Bears 29-17.

Just days after returning from Miami, Johnson pleaded guilty to violating his probation in the 2005 case. He has pleaded not guilty to the Lake County charges in the latest arrest

Source
 

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