Author Topic: Travis Henry faces the consequences  (Read 794 times)

Dos Equis

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Travis Henry faces the consequences
« on: March 14, 2009, 07:09:48 PM »
Somebody sterilize this fool.   ::)

Travis Henry faces the consequences

Mike Tierney, New York Times

Saturday, March 14, 2009

This was no simple task. Henry, 30, a former NFL running back who played for three teams from 2001 to 2007, has nine children - each by a different mother, some born as closely as a few months apart.

Reports of Henry's prolific procreating, generated by child-support disputes, have highlighted how futile the NFL's attempts can be at educating its players about making wise choices. The disputes have even eclipsed the attention he received after he was indicted on charges of cocaine trafficking.

"They've got my blood; I've got to deal with it," Henry said of fiscal responsibilities to his children. He spoke by telephone from his Denver residence, where he was under house arrest until recently for the drug matter.

Henry had just returned from Atlanta, where a judge showed little sympathy for his predicament during a hearing and declined to lower monthly payments from $3,000 for a 4-year-old son.

Three days after the telephone interview, he was jailed for falling $16,600 behind on support for a youngster in Frostproof, Fla., his hometown.

"I love all my kids," he said in the interview, but asserted he could not afford the designated amounts, estimated by Randy Kessler, his Atlanta lawyer, at $170,000 annually. Kessler said Henry was virtually broke.

"I've lost everything in this mess I've gotten myself into," Henry said.

His eldest child was conceived while Henry was in high school, before he was named Mr. Florida Football and a Parade All-American. The child was unplanned as were all but one of his offspring, he said.

"I'm like, 'Whoa, I'm going to be a dad,"' Henry recalled.

He was wed, at 19, to another of the nine mothers, who was six years older. Henry's mother, who picked oranges for a living, disapproved.

"She was going crazy over it," Henry said. He added that he filed for an annulment within a year "for her."

Two relationships while he attended the University of Tennessee produced two more children. Attending the annual NFL rookie symposium as a 2001 draft pick of the Buffalo Bills, Henry watched a skit that dramatized the repercussions of imprudent sexual activity. It might as well have been geared toward him.

Henry laughed through the sketch. "I thought, 'That ain't ever going to happen to me,"' he said.

But it had, and it was just beginning.

Henry maintained that he was involved long-term with many of the mothers. Some, he said, told him they were using birth control, and he professed surprise at discovering they had become pregnant by him.

"I did use protection at first," he said. "Then they'd be saying they'd be on the pill. I was an idiot to trust them. Second or third time with them, I didn't use it. Then, boom!"

In four instances, he attested, "I was trapped." If not for his football cachet and accompanying wealth, "I guarantee you that wouldn't have happened."

"My counselor asks me, 'How can you do the same thing over and over?"' he said, unable to provide an answer.

"Knock on wood, or something, I'm blessed not to have AIDS. That never crossed my mind."

Henry declined to discuss aspects of his drug case. He was arrested last fall in Colorado with another man and has pleaded not guilty to charges that could net him 10 years to life in prison if convicted. The arraignment is scheduled for next month.

At the latest child-support hearing in Atlanta, Henry testified vaguely that sizable cash withdrawals were connected to his criminal matter, not to any conspicuous consumption for himself.

In an interview, Robert Wellon, the lawyer who represents the mother in Atlanta, Jameshia Beacham, characterized Henry as spending "like there was no tomorrow," thus depriving the children of money.

The Denver Broncos gave Henry a five-year, $25 million contract in 2007. Cut last year by the team, which cited injuries and off-the-field commotion, he received only $6.7 million.

Henry is seeking to modify child-support obligations.

"I feel sorry for the guy, trust me," Wellon said of Henry's financial straits. "On the other hand, when you take those kind of actions, there are consequences. He could have taken care of the money."

Henry argued that, within the context of richly paid athletes, he was not out of line. He contended that he owned no more than three vehicles at once and figured he had spent $250,000 on jewelry. "That ain't a lot," he said. Nevertheless, he was hoping to pawn some jewelry to pay off one of many debts and gain freedom.

If there were excesses, Henry said, they involved his immediate family, like picking up travel expenses to games during his seven-year career, highlighted by three 1,200-yard-plus seasons.

"I have a big heart," he said. "I was taking care of a lot of people. I was acting like somebody who never had nothing. Could never get into that saving mode."

Back in Denver, his fiancee awaits. They set a wedding date but agreed to postpone it until the storm dissipates.

One other subject they agree on: Neither wants children.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/03/14/SP4016EISQ.DTL

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Re: Travis Henry faces the consequences
« Reply #1 on: March 14, 2009, 11:17:10 PM »
not very smart to fall off the face of the earth when you have 10 baby moms, eh?

Andy Griffin

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Re: Travis Henry faces the consequences
« Reply #2 on: March 15, 2009, 04:36:09 PM »
If he needs money so badly, why not just write a book:  My Fickle Pickle by Travis Henry.
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