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Rae Carruth thegrio.com
Former wide receiver Rae Carruth (Credit: Jamie Squire /Allsport)

Wearing a skull cap and a mild smile, former NFL wide receiver Rae Carruth walked out of the Sampson Correctional Institution in Clinton this morning, 18 years after his conviction for conspiring to kill his unborn child and ex-girlfriend.

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The former Carolina Panthers wide receiver, ex-girlfriend, Cherica Adams, was seven months pregnant with Carruth’s son on Nov. 16, 1999 when she was shot while driving in Charlotte, North Carolina.

The shooter, Van Brett Watkins, was hired by Carruth, according to Sports Illustrated. Watkins was sentenced to a minimum of 40 years in jail. Michael Kennedy, who drove the car, was released from jail in 2011.

The third-year wide receiver was convicted of conspiracy to commit murdershooting into an occupied vehicle and using an instrument to destroy an unborn child. Adams died a month after she was shot and Carruth faced a first-degree murder charge, but he was found not guilty of that particular charge. Their son, Chancellor Lee Adams, will turn 19 in November. He was born a month prematurely with cerebral palsy, as a result of injuries sustained in the shooting, according to ESPN.

Carruth was sentenced to 18 to 24 years in 2001 and served his time in the Sampson Correctional Institution in Clinton, North Carolina, NBC News reports.

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In February, Carruth penned a 15-page letter to the victim’s mother, apologizing for the “loss of her daughter” and the “impairment of my son,” as reported by WBTV in Charlotte. In an interview with the TV station, Carruth told WBTV that he desired to form a relationship with Chancellor and to gain custody of his son, who has been raised by his maternal grandmother, Saundra Adams, since birth.

“I should be raising my son,” Carruth told WBTV via phone. “Ms. Adams should not be doing this and I want that responsibility back.”

Saundra Adams responded in an interview with the Charlotte Observer: “I can say definitively [Carruth’s] not ever going to have custody of Chancellor.”

“Chancellor will be raised either by me or, after I’m gone, by someone else who loves him and who knows him,” Adams continued. “He will never be raised by a stranger – someone he doesn’t know and who tried to kill him.”

According to Fox 46, Carruth walked out of the Sampson Correctional Facility in Clinton, NC Monday morning and did not speak to reporters.

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