Capt. Dan Morley of the Saratoga County Sheriff's Office recently spoke with former NFL player Henry Ruggs III about his experience with drunken driving. A short 30-second clip of the conversation was ...
Henry Ruggs III was sentenced to 3-10 years in prison for killing Tina Tintor in a fiery car crash -- Photo Credit: Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department Convicted former Las Vegas Raiders wide ...
Former NFL wide receiver Henry Ruggs III left the Nevada Department of Corrections’ Casa Grande Transitional Housing on Tuesday night to share his story at a Hope for Prisoners event in Las Vegas, and ...
On Oct. 24, 2021, Las Vegas Raiders wide receiver Henry Ruggs III caught four passes for 24 yards in a 33-22 win over the Philadelphia Eagles. Nine days later, on Nov. 2, 2021, he made the worst ...
Former Las Vegas Raiders wide receiver Henry Ruggs III said he wishes he could "turn back the hands of time" at an event Tuesday where he spoke about his 2021 drunk driving car crash, which left a ...
Before he was known as prisoner 1273265, Henry Ruggs was No. 11 for the Raiders. That changed on a November night in 2021 when Ruggs drove 156 mph while under the influence. He caused a fiery crash ...
The former player was sentenced to three years in prison for the November 2021 crash, which killed a 23-year-old woman and her dog K.M. Cannon/Las Vegas Review-Journal/Tribune News Service via Getty ...
Henry Ruggs III publicly apologized to the family of the woman he killed in a fatal November 2021 car crash during a speech at a Hope for Prisoners event in Las Vegas. "One, I wish I could turn back ...
Former Raiders wide receiver Henry Ruggs, on special release Tuesday night, spoke at a Hope for Prisoners event in Las Vegas and apologized to the family of a woman he killed in a car crash nearly ...
Former Las Vegas Raiders receiver Henry Ruggs is seeking forgiveness 21 months into his prison sentence after killing a woman while driving 156 mph in November 2021. Ruggs, who was sentenced to ...
Henry Ruggs III stood before a crowd at the “Hope For Prisoners” event in Las Vegas on Tuesday, not as the former first-round pick or speedster from Alabama, but as a man owning up to the tragedy that ...