New England Patriots safety Jabrill Peppers is expected back on the stand Friday after his domestic violence trial started Thursday with a woman testifying that he grabbed her by the neck, slammed her against the wall,
New England Patriot safety Jabrill Pepper’s fate will soon be in the hands of the jury at Quincy District Court.
Patriots safety Jabrill Peppers is scheduled to go on trial Wednesday for allegedly shoving his girlfriend’s head into a wall and choking her after she received a phone call while they were in bed together.
Peppers was arrested in October and charged with assault, strangulation and possession of drugs after an altercation with his girlfriend at his Braintree apartment.
With the cocaine charge out of the way, Peppers can get to the litany of other ugly charges he’s staring down in Massachusetts.
Peppers' admittance cleared the charge through an agreement with prosecutors. He has pleaded not guilty to assault charges.
New England Patriots safety Jabrill Peppers finished testifying Friday in his assault and battery trial by denying he choked or shoved his accuser.
The Patriots safety is accused of slamming his girlfriend's head into a wall and choking her in October. His lawyer says he'll be exonerated.
Fürst, now 92, is one of a dwindling number of Holocaust survivors able to share first-person accounts of the horrors they endured, as the world marks the 80th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazis’ most notorious death camp. Fürst is returning to Auschwitz for the annual occasion, his fourth trip to the camp.
Jabrill Peppers, a safety for the New England Patriots, repeatedly denied accusations of domestic violence while testifying in his own defense at his trial Friday. The case is now in the hands of the jury.
The FBI said Friday that it arrested a Washington state woman in the fatal shooting of a U.S. Border Patrol agent in Vermont.