Boxer Vernon Forrest Murdered In Attempted Car Jacking

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Updated: July 26, 2009, 8:40 PM ET
Former champion Forrest shot to death

Former two-division world champion Vernon Forrest was shot and killed Saturday night during an attempted robbery, police said Sunday.

Fulton County medical examiner Michele Stauffenberg confirmed the case was a homicide and that the autopsy showed Forrest died from "multiple gunshot wounds involving the torso and thigh." Sgt. Lisa Keyes said a police report on the shooting was not immediately available.

WSB Radio in Atlanta first reported the shooting, citing a police spokesman. Forrest, who was 38, lived in Atlanta and was an Augusta, Ga., native.

Lt. Keith Meadows told the radio station that Forrest was shot seven or eight times -- at least once in the head -- as he chased at least two men who had tried to steal his Jaguar as he put air in its tires at an Atlanta gas station. Forrest had a gun and confronted the men, who fatally wounded him with two semi-automatic weapons, according to police.


David Livingston/Getty Images

Vernon Forrest, a recent WBC junior middleweight champion, was killed Saturday as he chased at least two men who had tried to steal his car, police said.

"At this point we have a general description of at least two black males driving a red Monte Carlo," Meadows said, according to the report.
Keyes said that there are no official suspects at this time.

Promoter Gary Shaw, who had two stints as Forrest's promoter, said, "It's 100 percent confirmed. He's dead. I will say this about him -- he was a decent human being. His work with kids, I think people knew how much he cared for kids, underprivileged and mentally challenged people. He was a real decent human being outside the ropes."

Charles Watson, the boxer's manager, said police and witnesses told him that Forrest had stopped at a gas station to put air in his car tire when a man approached asking for money.

"Somehow, Vernon had his wallet out and the guy snatched his wallet and started running," Watson said. "Vernon pursued after him. The guy turned the corner and Vernon didn't see him. He turned around to go back to the car. That's when he started firing."

Watson said that Forrest's 11-year-old godson was with him but had gone into the convenience store and did not witness the shooting.

"What can you say? Alexis Arguello, Arturo Gatti and Vernon Forrest all leaving us within 30 days? I think it's a little much for our sport to handle," Shaw said, referring to the recent high-profile deaths of two other boxing stars. "The violence, the guns have to go. Violence belongs inside the ropes. Not outside them. It's just senseless. Maybe boxing ought to dedicate itself to keeping the violence inside the ropes and try to send that message out to the world."

Gatti, a former two-time champion who retired in 2007, was found dead July 11 at a Brazilian resort. Gatti's wife, Amanda Rodrigues, is being held as the prime suspect.

Arguello, another former champion, was found dead on July 1 at his home in Managua, Nicaragua, in an apparent suicide. He was elected mayor of Nicaragua's capital last year.

Forrest's trainer, Buddy McGirt, also worked with Gatti. McGirt said Forrest planned to start training Aug. 1 for his next fight.

"I just feel so bad, he has a son you know," McGirt said. "Someone is going to be raised without a father because somebody wanted to rob someone."
Manager Al Haymon was too broken up to talk about Forrest, the first fighter he signed to what would become an all-star stable.

"He was one of the most gracious and charitable fighters in boxing and he will be missed by the entire boxing community and all of his friends at HBO," HBO Sports president Ross Greenburg told The Associated Press.

Greenburg helped in the production of eight of Forrest's fights.

"Maybe Vernon's lasting legacy will be for Americans everywhere to rise up and end this kind of senseless violence," Greenburg said.

Forrest (41-3, 29 KOs), a 1992 U.S. Olympian, was a former two-time welterweight and two-time junior middleweight champion best known for his two decision victories against Shane Mosley in 2002.

Forrest had beaten Mosley to keep him off the 1992 Olympic team but when they met in January 2002 in New York, it was Mosley, then widely regarded as the pound-for-pound No. 1 fighter in boxing, who was a significant favorite.

Instead, Forrest knocked Mosley down and dominated the fight to hand him his first pro loss and win the WBC welterweight title. Forrest outpointed him in a closer fight in the July 2002 rematch in Indianapolis.

Forrest won the vacant IBF welterweight title in May 2001 with a lopsided decision against Raul Frank in New York. It was a rematch because their first bout ended in a three-round no contest nine months earlier. Forrest never defended that belt, instead vacating in order to facilitate the big-money first fight with Mosley.

Forrest was also known for his charitable side because of his involvement in Destiny's Child, a group home that provides support and guidance for mentally challenged adults. Forrest had often talked about how the struggles of people he helped support provided him with inspiration when he fought.

"It was truly his calling," Forrest's publicist, Kelly Swanson, said of his work with children. "When he wasn't boxing, this was his full-time job."

After signing a multimillion dollar contract with HBO after the wins against Mosley, Forrest was stunningly upset in the first fight of the new deal when Ricardo Mayorga knocked him out in the third round in January 2003 in Temecula, Calif. In the rematch that July in Las Vegas, Mayorga won a majority decision to retain the title.

Forrest entered the rematch with Mayorga with nagging shoulder and elbow injuries, which required surgery and forced him into a two-year layoff after the bout.

Forrest returned in July 2005 and knocked out Elco Garcia; he was still troubled by his left arm, but continued to fight. After another one-year layoff, Forrest won a controversial decision against former welterweight titlist Ike Quartey in August 2006 before another 11-month layoff.

Forrest came back again in July 2007 and easily outpointed former welterweight champ Carlos Baldomir to win the vacant WBC junior middleweight title.

After knocking out Michele Piccirillo in the 11th round of his first defense in December 2007, Forrest was upset by former "Contender" reality series winner Sergio Mora via majority decision in June 2008.

But Forrest reclaimed the title Sept. 13 in Las Vegas by dominating Mora in the rematch in what turned out to be Forrest's final fight.

Ken Hershman, vice president in charge of boxing at Showtime, which aired Forrest's first fight with Mora, said Forrest was a popular fighter who was dedicated to his charity work.

"He wasn't looking for anything, he just did it because it was the right thing to do," Hershman said.

"Vernon was a young, vibrant guy coming to the end of his career. He still had a lot of life ahead of him."

Forrest had been scheduled to defend against mandatory challenger Sergio Martinez on Aug. 1, but suffered a rib injury training for an April tune-up fight with Jason LeHoullier and withdrew from both matches.

With the mandatory defense long overdue against Martinez, Forrest was stripped of his title. But, according to Shaw, he was not quite finished.
"He was ready to come back and we were discussing fights for Vernon," said Shaw, who first promoted Forrest when the two were with Main Events in the early part of the decade. "I had told Al Haymon recently I would love to make a fight between Vernon and [middleweight champion] Kelly Pavlik. I thought he still had a career in front of him."

Dan Rafael is a senior boxing writer for ESPN.com. Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
 

Maikeru-sama

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RIP

So basically, one guy was used to get Forrest away from his car while the other guy steals it.

My first thought is that if Forrest hadn't pursued the guy who stole his wallet, shots may have not been fired, but I suspect the guy that was waiting to steal his Jaguar would have shot him had he not chased after his accomplice.
 

theogt

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Sad. The lesson here is no car or possession is worth risking your life.
 

Maikeru-sama

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Based on the story, I wouldn't be suprised if they would have killed him no matter what he did.
 

DIAF

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The shooting happened in the Mechanicsville area. It's the area across the interstate from Turner Field, and its not someplace you EVER want to be, day or night.
 

theogt

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DIAF;2855613 said:
The shooting happened in the Mechanicsville area. It's the area across the interstate from Turner Field, and its not someplace you EVER want to be, day or night.
A place with a name like that is doomed from its incorporation.
 

JonJon

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theogt;2855639 said:
A place with a name like that is doomed from its incorporation.
I'm just now hearing of this story. I'm surprised that it was not more widely covered. Tragic story. I never really liked "The Viper" in the ring, but I will give it to him that he had heart and didn't back down from anyone in the ring. He didn't care if you were pound for pound or champion, he took you head on and then took your head off. Just ask Shane Mosley.

[youtube]pzQsyqVESHY[/youtube]

Unfortunately, that same attitude and determination followed Forrest into the real life and lead to his demise.

RIP Forrest. You will be missed.
 

JonJon

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A second man was arrested Wednesday in the murder of boxer Vernon Forrest.

Jquante Crews, 25, was arrested at 5:15 p.m. Wednesday at the home of his brother on Jones Circle in College Park, Atlanta police said.
He is being charged with murder, felony murder, possession of a firearm by a felon in commission of a crime, aggravated assault and armed robbery.

Crews, a resident of Dallas is not believed to be the person who shot and killed Forrest, police said. He was the driver of the Pontiac Grand Prix used as the get-a-way car by a group of men who robbed Forrest July 26 before he was killed, police said.
Crews quickly denied involvement in the crime as he was being walked to a police van transporting him to Fulton County jail.
“Innocent,” he yelled at nearby reporters. “Believe that.”

The arrest of Crews was the second police have made in as many days in the Forrest case. Damario Ware, 20, was arrested Tuesday night after surrendering to the Fulton County District Attorney. He made his first court appearance Wednesday morning.
Neither Ware nor Crews shot Forrest, police said. But one of them knows the shooter and had an encounter with him after Forrest was shot.
The shooter, unnamed, is still at large.
Ware’s grandmother cried as he made his first court appearance wearing a jail jumpsuit and handcuffs on Wednesday.
“I taught him right from wrong,” Rose Thomas said outside the Fulton County Jail Wednesday after Ware’s initial court appearance lasting less than a minute, the time it took a magistrate to read him his rights.
Thomas, who raised Ware, sat alone on one of the two benches set aside for the public in the courtroom at the jail. With tears rolling down her cheeks, she cried into her hands.

Forrest was robbed in a southwest Atlanta convenience store parking lot early on July 26.
Ware, whose image of him confronting the boxer was captured on surveillance video, surrendered to police Tuesday. Ware is charged with murder, armed robbery, aggravated assault and two gun offenses.
Lt. Keith Meadows, who heads the Atlanta Police Department’s homicide unit, said Wednesday, “we are following other leads and I expect there will be more arrests soon.”

He declined to be specific.
Wednesday morning, Charles Watson, Forrest’s friend and manager and the spokesman for the boxer’s family, was angry about the direction he saw the case going.

“Right now they are probably trying to cut a deal with this guy [Ware] to get the shooter,” Watson said. “We don’t want a deal. We want justice. All of them should be convicted for the crime for murder.”
He said Ware should not get any special treatment because he “started the whole chain reaction with the robbery.”
The grandmother and Ware’s uncle, Frederick Waters, said a threatening call came to the Thomas house; they believe it was intended to frighten Ware about possible danger to his family should he be thinking about helping police.
According to Thomas, the caller Wednesday morning warned “don’t go to a service station late at night” and also said someone was going to “shoot up my house.”

The 38-year-old former world welterweight boxing champion was putting air in a rear tire on his Jaguar when Ware allegedly approached him. Forrest’s godson was inside the story, buying snacks.
Police said Forrest, armed, chased the robber down Whitehall Street, but lost sight of the man. As he was walking back, however, he encountered another armed man, and the two exchanged words.
Realizing he had confronted the wrong man, police said, Forrest turned to walk away. He was shot in the back seven or eight times.
Forrest’s gold and diamond “4X World Champion” ring and a Rolex watch were taken and have not been recovered.

“He wasn’t raised to do the things he done,” the grandmother said. “I pray to God to guide him. He’s grown now so it’s out of my hands. I’m so sorry. I hurt for the Forrest family.”
Waters, Ware’s uncle, added as he helped his mother into a mini van, “our prayers go out to his family.”
 

Maikeru-sama

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Based on the article JonJon just posted, I still don't see how people can say Vernon Forrest's actions led to his demise.
 

JonJon

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Maikeru-sama;2869347 said:
Based on the article JonJon just posted, I still don't see how people can say Vernon Forrest's actions led to his demise.
The only thing I can come up with is that if he didn't go chasing after the first guy, he still might have gotten away. Every battle is not yours to fight....he should have let that one go and live to fight another day.
 

Maikeru-sama

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JonJon;2869402 said:
The only thing I can come up with is that if he didn't go chasing after the first guy, he still might have gotten away. Every battle is not yours to fight....he should have let that one go and live to fight another day.

I disagree. Based on the accounts below, he couldn't catch the guy he was chasing. When he came back to his car, another guy with a gun was there and that guy shot him in the back.

The 38-year-old former world welterweight boxing champion was putting air in a rear tire on his Jaguar when Ware allegedly approached him. Forrest’s godson was inside the story, buying snacks.
Police said Forrest, armed, chased the robber down Whitehall Street, but lost sight of the man. As he was walking back, however, he encountered another armed man, and the two exchanged words.
Realizing he had confronted the wrong man, police said, Forrest turned to walk away. He was shot in the back seven or eight times.
Forrest’s gold and diamond “4X World Champion” ring and a Rolex watch were taken and have not been recovered.
 

JonJon

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Maikeru-sama;2869613 said:
I disagree. Based on the accounts below, he couldn't catch the guy he was chasing. When he came back to his car, another guy with a gun was there and that guy shot him in the back.
I could be wrong but it sounded like the second gunman was also away from the car when he shot Forrest, further down the street from the gas station. If he was out to steal the car, he would have done so when Forrest started chasing the other guy.
 
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