Javaris Crittenton: From budding star to murder suspect

Javaris Crittenton on the night he was drafted by the Lakers. (AJC file photo)

Javaris Crittenton on the night he was drafted by the Los Angeles Lakers. (AJC file photo)

We pause to consider the arc of a young life.

• In 2004 Javaris Crittenton — a sophomore and already a team captain — teams with Dwight Howard to lead Southwest Atlanta Christian to the Class A title.

• In 2006 Crittenton graduates from high school — where he’d been a 3.5 student and a member of both the Beta Club and the Future Business Leaders of America — and enrolls at Georgia Tech.

• In 2007 he exits Tech after a good-but-not great freshman season and is taken by the Los Angeles Lakers with the 19th pick of the NBA draft.

• In January 2010 he pleads guilty to a misdemeanor charge resulting from the infamous guns-in-the-locker-room that involved Crittenton and Washington Wizards teammate Gilbert Arenas, who on Christmas Eve engaged in an argument regarding gambling debts. Both players are suspended by the NBA for the rest of the season.

• On Aug. 26, 2011, a warrant is issued for Crittenton’s arrest. The charge: murder.

Maybe you’re clever enough to have foreseen this path. I’m not. Yeah, I thought Crittenton was a gifted player who left school a year too soon. The same could be said of his Tech classmate Thaddeus Young, and Young has done nicely with the Philadelphia 76ers. Lots of guys leave too soon. Some of them make it anyway.

And it’s not as if warning lights flashed at every turn. Crittenton attended one high school for four years, which isn’t always the contemporary norm. He played alongside Howard, who jumped directly to the NBA and has become one of the five best players in the world. Crittenton’s summers were spent playing AAU ball with the Atlanta Celtics, a program that boasts a long list of distinguished alums. He signed with Tech, a proud program in the high-minded ACC. He was drafted by the Lakers, the NBA’s best organization.

And yet: This gifted young player was gone from the NBA in three years, having worked his way through four organizations. He was cut last October by the Charlotte Bobcats. He played five games with a team in China and spent the winter with the Dakota Wizards, the Bismarck-based franchise in the NBA Development League, averaging 14.5 points and 6.7 assists.

That’s the basketball part of it. I’m not sure how much basketball has to do with this homicide warrant. (And here we stipulate that Crittenton is innocent until proved guilty.) You can tut-tut and say, “Oh, it’s the system of entitlement that leads to guns in the locker room,” but I’ve hung around the NBA for more than a quarter-century, and I’ve never seen a gun in a locker room.

The gun-related suspension should have been a lesson. Nineteen months later, Crittenton is wanted for allegedly having loosed the shots from an SUV that took the life of a young woman who happened to be in the line of fire. (Police believe Crittenton saw someone who’d stolen jewelry from him earlier this year.)

At such a distressing moment, it would be convenient to blame basketball for the wrong turns in Crittenton’s 23-year-old life. But there’s free will involved in every life, is there not? He has had role models. He was around successful people and winning programs. He was a good student who was thought to have leadership qualities. And he had, owing to having been a Round 1 draftee, a guaranteed contract.

Give some people those circumstances and they’d make the most of them. Crittenton has made the least. (His profile on Twitter bore this greeting: “Say hello to the bad guy!” The account was apparently deleted Friday night.) It’s never surprising when a good young player doesn’t grow into an NBA All-Star — not many do — but it is shocking when you read the AJC.com headline, “Former Georgia Tech star wanted for fatal shooting.”

Had he stayed four years at Tech, Crittenton would have just finished his NBA rookie season. That’s not an excuse for anything, nor is it an explanation. It wasn’t some “system” that caused a young woman’s death. It was a choice made by one person to raise a gun and pull its trigger. Yes, it’s possible that person wasn’t Javaris Crittenton. The warrant does, however, bear his name.

By Mark Bradley

109 comments Add your comment

KenDawg

August 27th, 2011
12:38 pm

Sad – but first?

Mark Bradley

August 27th, 2011
12:39 pm

Kudos, KenDawg.

Delbert D.

August 27th, 2011
12:41 pm

Seeking revenge while carrying a gun is a bad idea.

Fan of Good Coaches

August 27th, 2011
12:41 pm

Tragic for so many reasons…the young woman who was killed left 4 children according to reports….their lives are forever changed….Crittenden will turn 24 on Dec. 31, which means he left Tech at age 19…one can wonder how his life might have been different if he had stayed in college and graduated….perhaps he would have made better decisions…

[...] as a huge shock. Crittenton was a former captain of his high school team while accruing a …Javaris Crittenton: From budding star to murder suspectAtlanta Journal Constitution (blog)Javaris Crittenton, Former NBA Guard, Charged with MurderThe [...]

Nativebird

August 27th, 2011
12:49 pm

Nice summary of facts, the arc, the timeline, the results of a life, career obviously astray; and tradgedy of a young women’s death. Conversely, why the jump to the defense of “all NBA” players? I’ve seen no broad sweep of judgement about this. I’ve seen no sterotype attack about this? have you? Appears you’ve jumped the gun so to speak a little early (pun apologies)….are we maybe ‘expecting’ a broad charge of gangsterism is it? Can we not wait until it happens before we defend what we ‘think’ might be assumed?

CPJ Disciple

August 27th, 2011
12:53 pm

Definitely puts a dent in the Paul Hewitt was a great recruiter defense argument…

ratherBgambling

August 27th, 2011
12:54 pm

Lifes ruined over jewerly. Very sad.

[...] Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog) [...]

MWC

August 27th, 2011
12:55 pm

You never know….

Jcard120

August 27th, 2011
12:57 pm

Sad story of another gifted athlete without the proper guidance to succeed as an adult. Why in the world would you jeopardize the life every athlete dreams of to commit murder?

teamsparkssgc

August 27th, 2011
12:59 pm

Living in the struggle, and to have the blessing to overcome it is Gods will. To loose focus is showing that the devil is working. What’s next?

dan the nerd

August 27th, 2011
1:07 pm

A sad day for GT. My heart and prayers go out to the family of the victim.

Grandmaster JeJe

August 27th, 2011
1:08 pm

final score > total rushing yards

August 27th, 2011
1:10 pm

VERY SAD SITUATION.

But I think this may be the final straw that has broken the donkey Tech has paraded around recently trying to claim that they ONLY draft super-smart, law abiding model citizens.

Matt Skole DUI, Jarret Jack DUI, the baseball team hosting an admitted drug addict as a publicity stunt (Charlie Sheen), NCAA catching Tech cheating, and now Crittenton murdering an innocent person……

Time to come off your high horse, nerds. Your athletic program is an embarrassment to this state.

final score > total rushing yards

August 27th, 2011
1:11 pm

pathetic Tech.

Just pathetic.

[...] was gunning for someone …Former Georgia Tech star Crittenton charged with murderNooga.comJavaris Crittenton: From budding star to murder suspectAtlanta Journal Constitution (blog)Javaris Crittenton Wanted For Alleged Murder, Had Good Reputation [...]

pembrook burrows III

August 27th, 2011
1:13 pm

Mark,
The Boston Celtics are the best NBA organization with the most banners . nuff said

Mark Bradley

August 27th, 2011
1:13 pm

I’m really not sure Georgia Tech had much, if anything, to do with this.

dawgfan

August 27th, 2011
1:17 pm

Georgia Tech would have nothing to do with this if their fans weren’t such sanctimonious holier than thou stuck up whiners who trash the character and intelligence of our entire football team every single chance they get. But that isn’t the case is it Bradley?

collegeballfan

August 27th, 2011
1:19 pm

People make decisions. Some are good and some are bad.

He left GT for a 3 year guaranteed NBA contract for several million dollars.

charlton heston

August 27th, 2011
1:20 pm

look at this tragic case,all handguns in this country should be collected melted down and used for something useful,like a boat anchor,the old saying guns don’t kill people,people kill people is just plain stupid,people with guns kill people

John

August 27th, 2011
1:24 pm

dawgfan- go back spooning with your sister, some cold buds, and watching monster truck on cable. you are one bitter schmo

Time

August 27th, 2011
1:26 pm

Bradley, Tech has just as much to do with it as UGA does when any UGA player gets in trouble. Doesn’t stop you from writing it or the Techies from posting their ThUGA nonsense.

Or is it UGA is always at fault when one of the kids wrecks a scooter or shoots off fireworks and gets in trouble, but Tech is absolved of any connection when one of it’s former players kills someone in a drive-by?

JD

August 27th, 2011
1:27 pm

Crittenton was a classic “one and done” under Hewitt. Give me a hard working student athlete that stays four years and grows and matures with the team. Never felt he was a true Tech player. Don’t know if he ever grew up and shooting at someone from a moving vehicle and hitting someone else is not a big shock. He obviously still had the thug mentality from Arenas.

JD

August 27th, 2011
1:29 pm

Hey Time, he’s been gone for years. Don’t think the coaches monitor them after they leave.

MJC

August 27th, 2011
1:34 pm

Whether it’s fair or not, Hewitt is probably going to have nightmares about this. “If I could’ve convinced him to stay just one more year…”

Lisa

August 27th, 2011
1:35 pm

A waste of talent and waste of life. What was he thinking?

JD

August 27th, 2011
1:37 pm

If there is anything that could be blamed on Tech, it is that Hewitt didn’t recruit him for character and knowing that, didn’t instill some in him before he left. You can sometimes turn a kid around with good role models and some you can’t. Don’t know if Hewitt ever tried.

[...] all around a web …Former NBA player Crittenton charged with murderLas Vegas Review-JournalJavaris Crittenton: From budding star to attempted attempted attempted murder suspectAtlanta Journal Constitution (blog)Former NBA player, Ga. Tech star longed for in killingWSB [...]

Lisa

August 27th, 2011
1:39 pm

Four children wake up every morning without their mother now. For what, revenge that wasn’t justified. May GOD be with and bless those children.

David Grey

August 27th, 2011
1:42 pm

Wow, blaming tech for the decisions made by a grown man, who happens to be a former student, five years after graduation? Really people? These actions were not allegedly undertaken by Javaris Crittenton in the context on him being a student athlete under the supervision of of the Georgia Tech Basketball Program. Tech’s supervision of student athletes ceases when said students leave the program, much akin to your kindergarten being absolved of responsibility for you, a former student, upon graduation. FYI…..we are all responsible for our own actions. And btw, I did not attend Tech.

Rasta

August 27th, 2011
1:43 pm

Just goes to show that sometimes you can take the kid out of the hood, but… et cetera

[...] Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Mark Bradley wrote an editorial Saturday morning looking back at the Atlanta native’s brief basketball career. Beginning with Crittenton [...]

dawgfan

August 27th, 2011
1:50 pm

David Grey, nobody is blaming Tech for anything. Tech fans should be no more ashamed of this than UGA fans should be when one of our football players steals a scooter helmet or urinates in some bushes, but Tech fans apparently don’t agree. They think its speaks poorly of the entire University of Georgia community when one of our football players fails to pay a speeding ticket or hits an unoccupied parked car and “flees the scene” from a UGA parking attendant. I suggest you take your beef up with them. I agree with you.

[...] the case, the former NBA player is bringing about plenty of reaction from all around the web …Javaris Crittenton: From budding star to murder suspectAtlanta Journal Constitution (blog)Former NBA player, Ga. Tech star wanted in killingWSB [...]

Baby daddy

August 27th, 2011
1:55 pm

Realize he’s gone, but….So much for the “we recruit a better, smarter, athlete theory.”

[...] the case, the former NBA player is bringing about plenty of reaction from all around the web …Javaris Crittenton: From budding star to murder suspectAtlanta Journal Constitution (blog)Former NBA player, Ga. Tech star wanted in killingWSB [...]

NovaJacket

August 27th, 2011
2:00 pm

Crittenton wanted to stay in school and was still going to classes unlike Young. However, family members wanted the payday and eventually won out. Wonder how everyone feels about that now….

GIVE ME A BREAK

August 27th, 2011
2:02 pm

A lot of comments are out of line as usual. You can’t blame GAC, GT or the NBA for his decisions. It looks like his parents steered him in the right diection but in the end it’s all on him. Still sad for him and the young woman killed.

GIVE ME A BREAK

August 27th, 2011
2:04 pm

David Grey, agree.

The Spirit of UGA VII

August 27th, 2011
2:04 pm

Crittenton is not in custody and is believed to be in the greater Los Angeles area, Meadows said. Atlanta detectives are working with the FBI to take him into custody. AJC

Well, all I know is the police are mighty casual about this. If some UGA kid gets caught peeing in some bushes off a sidewalk the cops are all over him and it makes all the news. Here, some guy opens up with a gun from a moving car, kills some woman walking down a street, and then gets on a plane and disappears. We all know the Atlanta cops and the FBI couldn’t catch a cold while laying on a block of ice in January.

And no, I don’t blame GT for any of this. But this whole thing says a lot about the cheapness of human life in Atlanta.

JSS

August 27th, 2011
2:06 pm

The comments here are among the many reasons why I deride so called major college athletics and its supporters. This is beyond silly, there is a person d-e-a-d! What don’t you people get about this matter?

The problems with Crittenton have so little to do with Tech, SW Atlanta Christian, his two two parent upbringing, Atlanta, nor the NBA. This all revolves around him being a “man” with a lack of any impulse control.

Now, I’m not to prejudge this case. That is what the courts are for, I know from the previous high profile cases in this region that is rarely the fact.

David Smith

August 27th, 2011
2:09 pm

I would have thought that Javaris would have learned from the altercation between him and Gilbert Arenas. Violence is never the answer in solving disputes and now one young life is extinguished and a gifted young basketball player’s career is in shambles.

[...] from all around the web …Former NBA player Javaris Crittenton wanted for murderSportsrageousJavaris Crittenton: From budding star to murder suspectAtlanta Journal Constitution (blog)Former NBA player, Ga. Tech star wanted in killingWSB [...]

[...] Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Mark Bradley wrote an editorial Saturday morning looking behind during a Atlanta native’s brief basketball career. Beginning with Crittenton [...]

moboman

August 27th, 2011
2:13 pm

What a waste. IF convicted, he will get plenty of time to grow up now. Im neither a GT or UGA fan, but really UGA folks, you make yourself look ridiculous trying to tie this to GT. Crittendon didnt stay long enough to be a GT man. If he had stayed a few years, he might have had the chance to mature enough to get his priorities straight. And I would be saying the same if he had been a UGA grad. He’s just a wasted talent who never grew up. Opting out early and taking the millions not very valuable if you dont know what to do with them.

bigeasy830

August 27th, 2011
2:19 pm

Mark Bradley

I first learned of this a week ago. I live on the south side and the young lady grew up with a close relative of mine and she died less than 15 ft from his doorstep. Atlanta PD asked the witnesses not to disclose much to the media pending the investigation. There is so much more to this story. Crittenton grew up on Cleveland Ave. Critentton grew up with most of the young people involved in this incident. He knew the young girl. He was robbed leaving a barbershop on Cleveland Ave one night. I guess he was one of those millionaire athletes that thinks he is so hood he can go back to the hood anytime with no fear of danger, WRONG, I am a working man and I get inside and lock the doors before the street lights come on. But anyway, After he was robbed, he went back into the barber shop with a pistol and claimed those guys set him up. That was not true, those guys are older and about business not foolishness. After that he drove through those neighborhoods questioning people about the incident. It was determined that there is notorious clique in the neighborhood that probably robbed him. Word is Crittenton committed a drive by shooting a couple a months earlier on a young man that he thought robbed him, he missed, the victim was unharmed in that incident. He was driving the same Tahoe. After the drive-by, the witness say they told APD who did it and gave them a motive. They told them it was Crittenton and he did it as retaliation for the earlier robbery. Crittenton should have been arrested for that drive-by, he should have served time for the gun in the locker room incident in DC. If he had been punished accordingly for those crimes maybe this young lady would still be alive to raise her 4 kids. I know it’s hard to believe, I did not believe it at first but when my source told me of the motive and my knowledge of the gun in the locker room incident and I thought of the Rae Carruth incident, I then knew he was stupid enough to commit this crime. The NBA swept that incident under the rug. Crittenton and Arenas should still be in prison over that. Both committed aggravated assault along with IRS violations for the gambling and not paying taxes on winnings, remember former Atlanta Mayor Bill Cambell served 2 yrs for that. From my understanding these card take place often on. most teams in all pro sports. It’s sad, the victim Julian Jones will be laid to rest today. 4 children will be without a mother. All because Crittenton ego was bruised because he got caught slipp’in. No material things are worth a life. He knew that girl was not involved in the robbery. But he still had no regard for her life as he pulled that trigger to seek revenge against the young men she was walking with that he thought robbed him. It’s sad man just sad.

[...] the case, the former NBA player is bringing about plenty of reaction from all around the web …Javaris Crittenton: From budding star to murder suspectAtlanta Journal Constitution (blog)Former NBA player, Ga. Tech star wanted in killingWSB [...]

Stinger2

August 27th, 2011
2:27 pm

Bradley:
threetrone`s racist comments need to be removed immediately. Very sad and bad.

Greg

August 27th, 2011
2:30 pm

Threetrone you are an embarrassment to the Institute for those comments…wake up skin color has nothing to do with this…the people who are saying that this is Tech’s fault are idiotic.

[...] target. According to AJC.com, authorities believe Crittenton was gunning for someone …Javaris Crittenton: From budding star to murder suspectAtlanta Journal Constitution (blog)Javaris Crittenton Wanted For Alleged Murder, Had Good Reputation [...]

oldbird

August 27th, 2011
2:32 pm

Come on people, I hate tech every November, like all dawgs do; but this is not about a school rivalry. This is about a young man who had it all, and screwed the pooch royally, and took the life of an innocent person. It is a tragedy, not something to beat your chest about. Please, grow up.

jay

August 27th, 2011
2:39 pm

I guess murder trumps red panties.

NJ Dawg

August 27th, 2011
2:56 pm

bigeasy830’s intelligent post, if true, sheds important perspective on the story. But regardless, Tech had nothing to do with this murder. Nor did Crittenton’s upbringing. Ultimately, Mark, he had free will (as you attest) and should have known better. Furthermore, while robbery is wrong, how in the hell does it justify a drive-by shooting. Crittenton’s prior behavior shows that he’s a jerk, and if he had ANYTHING to do with this young woman’s murder, he needs to go to jail for a LONG time.
What a waste.

Alphare

August 27th, 2011
3:07 pm

Mark, like every other young star fading early, it’s the parents’ fault.

You can almost see his parents thru his life.

Alphare

August 27th, 2011
3:11 pm

NJ Dawg,

Free will cannot explain the entire path of a person. I’ve seen lots of young men humble and affable. Most of time, it’s the parents’ guiding from behind.

One Black Mother

August 27th, 2011
3:18 pm

Sounds like someone should have told this young man to stay in college! Obviously he was not ready for the NBA! I believe if he had stayed at Georgia Tech he could have developed more as a MAN. Just goes to show that you can take the young man out of the hood but you can’t take the hood out of the young man!!! This young man needed guidance and apparently no one was there to guide him in the direction he needed to go! All I know Georgia Tech, or the NBA is not to blame for this sad tragedy. If he’s guilty of this horrible crime then he is to blame for this! Praying for both families the Jones and the Dixon-Crittenton.

bamaguy

August 27th, 2011
3:27 pm

I can’t help but remember the story Charles Barkley told about why he returned to Auburn to finish his degree after becoming a multi-million dollar NBA star. He said “My mama said stupid and rich is still stupid. Go finish your degree.” Or something along those lines. Giving that much money to a nineteen year-old does not make their life better. It just makes it more volatile.

What a tragic waste of a life. Both his and the young woman’s.

hoop.dream.deferred

August 27th, 2011
3:38 pm

isn’t it a shame that dwight howard’s uncle, DA paul howard, will have to prosecute a young man he once cheered in high school and presumably right up to this point?

[...] court — over the course of the last three years. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Mark Bradley wrote an editorial Saturday morning looking back at the Atlanta native’s brief basketball career. Beginning with Crittenton [...]

Buzz 2011

August 27th, 2011
4:00 pm

No negative Dawg comments, I don’t want to see one!!

marie

August 27th, 2011
4:18 pm

FINAL SCORE-you must be the biggest idiot on this site.
He made the decision to fire a gun. It has nothing to do with GT, Paul Hewitt, UGA arrests, blah blah blah. PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY -HEARD OF IT???

Shug

August 27th, 2011
4:22 pm

SMU, Jim Tressel, Cam Newton, Miami, Javaris Crittenton . . . . It’s all part of the same arc.

Some sick puppies

August 27th, 2011
4:24 pm

Trying to tie school rivalries into this incident is like trying to tie in politics to whatever may happen with Hurricane Irene. Get a life, you jerks. This is a very tragic incident, both for the victim and for Crittenton and his family. Those of you who claim you are only saying those things because Tech fans slam your school whenever one of your athletes gets in trouble is the height of immaturity and rudeness. For one thing, when your athletes recently have come under suspicion for doing illegal or stupid things, they were still under the supervision of the staff in Athens, and they DO make your school look bad. Crittenton attended Georgia Tech for one year 5 years ago, and he is no longer under Tech’s supervision, nor it would seem of anyone else either. He, and he alone, is to blame for his mistakes, crimes, sins, whatever. And you jerks are to blame for your own arrogance and stupidity.

Najeh Davenpoop

August 27th, 2011
4:27 pm

“We all know the Atlanta cops and the FBI couldn’t catch a cold while laying on a block of ice in January.”

Crittenton is believed to have fled to LA and he is suspected to be hiding out there. Not much APD can do in that situation.

bigeasy830

August 27th, 2011
4:29 pm

@ Najeh

If he is on the run, if he is in LA, then he is trying to or maybe already have made his way to Mexico.

NJ Dawg

August 27th, 2011
4:30 pm

Alphare,

Yes, but Crittenton’s 23 now. There comes a point where we’ve got to stop blaming everybody around him and accept that he’s responsible for his actions. I’m not saying his background didn’t factor into this, but then there are plenty of people from broken homes who didn’t go to GAC and would NEVER think a drive-by shooting is an appropriate response to a robbery, especially months after the fact.

Some sick puppies

August 27th, 2011
4:33 pm

Some of you guys are just plain sick. There is no more validity in bringing inter-school rivalry into this event than there is in bringing politics into whatever tragedy may result from Hurricane Irene. Those of you who so pitifully compare your statements to what Tech people say when UGA athletes get in trouble or way off base, because in the past couple of years when UGA athletes have gotten in trouble, they have been students and under the supervision of the coaches and administration in Athens. Of course, what they do makes your school look bad; similar situations at any school make that school look bad. But Crittenton was a student for one year at Tech, and that was five years ago. He is no longer under the supervision of anybody at Tech, nor, it would seem, anywhere else either. This whole incident is a tragedy, especially for the girl and her family, but also for Crittenton and whatever family he has. To turn it into something connected with the rivalry between UGA and Tech is frankly obscene, and I wish Mark would delete all the pathetic comments made along that line.

Some sick puppies

August 27th, 2011
4:37 pm

And, by the way, it is equally ignorant and obscene for any Tech fan to try to blame it on Hewitt. Crittenton chose to go the way he has gone in life, and it was obviously the wrong choice.

black mother....

August 27th, 2011
4:41 pm

he supposedly had coach sic paul hewitt providing him with extensive one on one counseling etc. i guess phewitt failed at that too.

far as the nba goes…. come on folks the nba has a thug environment and has for quite some time. guns guns guns and more guns. i dont recall jc having gun issues until he made the leap into the league.

i blame the league and the lax environment they foster. the nba should have pressed charges against both arenis and crit when they brought guns into the locker room. instead a high priced lawyer got him off with a slap of the wrist.

if i had brought 5 guns to any kind of function in my city i would still be in jail.

as far as ‘murder’ goes. he will never ever be convicted of murder. aint going to happen. for one…. he will be able to afford the best lawyer available (where is johnny when you need him ) and he had no premeditation to kill that girl.

at the worst (if he fired the shot) he will get aggravated manslaughter. spend 5 years in prison at most and get out when he is still a young man.

James Connah

August 27th, 2011
4:42 pm

bigeasy 830 says it all. Explains a lot. Even if the guy walking was the robber and even if he was alone why shoot him down in the street over it ? Now someone not involved is dead for no good reason.

I don’t see how Tech or Hewitt can be held accountable for any of this in any way.
I do wonder why APD didn’t investigate some of his past stuff – stupid question – they would rather be trying to catch speeders to get fine money to feed the politicians.

Harvey D. Pooka

August 27th, 2011
4:49 pm

Get with the program, people! “Innocent until proved guilty” is Soooooooooo biased.

It SHOULD read: “presummed innocent unless, and until evidence indicates, declared guity”.

Also, let;s not forget that a seemingly innocent life of a young woman has been lost, in this tragic story. Please be careful who you are hanging around with and be aware of your surroundings at all times.

Skeezix

August 27th, 2011
4:51 pm

Hearing these kinds of stories about young people is depressing. So much is wasted and a young woman loses her life— over what? Jewelry?
How do their values and priorities get so screwed up?

Tell me it’s a bad dream…………..

PerimeterCenterJacket

August 27th, 2011
4:52 pm

I don’t think a single Jackets fan (and especially not a Tech alumnus) should defend this in any way. The kid (he is still young, let’s face it) is a murder suspect. Only in a court of law can his name be cleared or condemned. If this is about Tech in any way for anyone, then say what you will, but Tech won’t be defending him. Paul Hewitt’s gone, and even if he were still on The Flats, Mr. Bradley makes a good point — who would’ve ever seen this bright hardcourt star going this route? If it’s true we really should only blame himself and perhaps then maybe his parents. But as a Tech fan, these aren’t excuses. I’m not among those who’ve ever looked at programs as either “dirty” or “clean.” But can Tech sit here and say we’ve only got the best? No. We have human beings just like everyone else. They’re not as bad as you’ll say they are, and they’re not as good as we’ll say they are. They just are.

As always, though, Go Jackets!

Fred

August 27th, 2011
4:53 pm

No, you GT haters cannot put blame for this on Coach Hewitt.

Neither can you blame the so-called “system” that is the NBA, nor the procedures allowing for early exit from college {although most are not mature enough to handle it}, nor the local community or surroundings of the city, nor the gun culture that I the U.S.A. It’s just a sad situation all the way around and no matter the outcome, several lives will never be the same again.

Outside Observer

August 27th, 2011
5:04 pm

Just a sad waste of talent and a true tragedy. He seemed like a bright kid with a good future, but he apparently entered a downward spiral that he could not escape. However, bringing in-state college rivalries into this is ridiculous and embarrassing, and yes, I’m talking to both Tech and UGA fans. At this point, all that can be done is to keep both families in our thoughts and prayers.

Some sick puppies

August 27th, 2011
5:07 pm

now that was the sickest post yet, tar, Mark, I hope you’re reading this and at the very least delete that racist remark.

Tonyrrhs

August 27th, 2011
5:09 pm

Sad part I bet he was just trying to scare them.

How nice ,,,,,

August 27th, 2011
5:09 pm

We’re so lucky to be living in the U.SA. Where else could we count on “bigwasy830″ being an expert on everything and able to set the rest of us straight.

Give me a break: a life was lost an others will never be the same, no matter what results happen down the road.

Tonyrrhs

August 27th, 2011
5:10 pm

Enter your comments here

techfan

August 27th, 2011
5:15 pm

Amazing that even when somebody dies, some see it as an opportunity to spark rival arguments. Some things are bigger then petty trash talking. It’s a shame that some don’t see that.

As for Javaris, I think he would have been better off being with Hewitt for longer. Say what you want about Hewitt’s ability to coach but he is a good man and a good role model. Give a kid a lot of money and fame before he can handle it and sometimes bad things can happen. This would be an example of the worst of those bad things.

Oscar Williams

August 27th, 2011
5:18 pm

Thats just horrible man….horrible!!! I always say, please hang around positive people and continue to stay busy doing positive things. An idle mind is the devil’s playground.

Lowcountry Bulldawg

August 27th, 2011
5:21 pm

I said this last night on th eTech blog, If you are truly a UGA gut show some class and respect for yourself and not mock this situation. Sure Tech fans give us grief on our blogs, but this situation is a terrible trajedy and does not need juvenile pot shots taken at one another. Respect yourself and the University of Georgia and refrain from acting like a juvenile.

Douglas

August 27th, 2011
5:22 pm

As a UGA fan, I do not blame GT for this. On the other hand, you are no different than UNC who signs players who just want to play one year and then go for the money. That is a character issue…they are using you…and you JUST DON’T CARE!

Lowcountry Bulldawg

August 27th, 2011
5:23 pm

Not for sure if my post was lost but…

UGA fans need to show some class for themselves and for the University of Georgia and not mock this situation. Tech fans may give us grief from time to time, but this situation is 100% different. Respect yourself and show some class.

Big Ol Stinger

August 27th, 2011
5:26 pm

You’re right techfan, but Final Score >, also known as dawgfan, and about twenty other screen names he posts under is one sick little dawg wannabe. He’s the most classless piece of shiite that posts on the AJC web sites and he’s in desperate need of a good old fashioned southern azz kickin. His parents must be embarassed for the pizz poor job they did of raising that little piece of shiite.

His real name is Jason and he didn’t even go to UGA. He’s admitted several times on blogs that he went to Troy, but I seriously doubt that too. I’m sure no Troy grad would claim his sorry butt. Anyway Jason, I wish you could trade places with the girl he shot, and I sincerely mean that.

Thanks.

What a waste?

August 27th, 2011
5:28 pm

He wasted his talent? You don’t have talent if you don’t have the intelligence to manage it. Clearly he lacks brain power. What kind of moron does something like this? One who will hopefully be in jail for the rest of his sorry life. Four children have to grow up knowing their mother was gunned down by this clown.

Basketball pro dad

August 27th, 2011
5:29 pm

My son played against this kid in highschool. I remember him opening up the SACA tournament in prayer. Unbelievable that something like this has happen. Praying for both families.

YellowJacket

August 27th, 2011
5:40 pm

Glad he left after one year. Always knew he was a loser. He should of signed with Kentucky.

Devil's Advocate

August 27th, 2011
5:41 pm

This is a terrible situation, and Javaris allegedly has done something absolutely terrible. But this shooting is a product of situation, upbringing, and surrounding oneself with others who have little regard for their own safety.

This mother has left behind 4 children who will never have the opportunity to know either person that has brought them into the world. But on the other side of the coin, its not like she was hanging out in the library. This crime was obviously retaliation for a previous crime committed by the two “gentlemen” with whom she was walking.

Without question, Javaris Crittendon deserves everything he gets, if he actually committed the crime, however why was this young woman even in this situation? Why was she with two suspected thieves instead of at home with the four children she had already brought into this world?

JP

August 27th, 2011
5:45 pm

The BL is UGA atheletes still lead all state schools in arrests and jailtime…heck they may even lead the nation. You can never take a UGA fan seriously….especially when their “intelligent” fanbase continues to post comments that a 7 year old would. These people are sad…and really DUMB!

Minnie Pearl

August 27th, 2011
5:48 pm

Would somebody please let the Dawgs out.

Minnie Pearl

August 27th, 2011
5:57 pm

My comment is awaiting moderation. I believe that censorship is a good thing.

Time is coming...

August 27th, 2011
5:57 pm

Going down to Jackson, Jackson, Jackson…

fan

August 27th, 2011
6:02 pm

To all the uga fans talking about uga players urinating in bushes etc, what was the name of the defensive back that started for uga for about three or four years? The one who commited murder in a drug deal gone bad?

Ted M

August 27th, 2011
6:02 pm

That was a rotten, stupid, criminal thing to do, even if he hadn’t killed an innocent bystander.

Unless he was high as kite you can’t say in any way that Javaris Crittenton is a good person. He’s a rotten person looking for trouble. I wonder now if Gilbert just got caught up with wrong person.

fan

August 27th, 2011
6:05 pm

didn”t uga have a defensive back that played a few years ago commit a murder?

DMAN

August 27th, 2011
6:13 pm

He played for tech,he’s tied to tech!Can’t stand the heat get out of the kitchen!It’s allright to trash the Dawgs on everything that doesn’t come close to this.Drug dealers to maybe a murderer,not even close!

fan

August 27th, 2011
6:15 pm

TEARREAL BIERRIA

GT, Sigma Chi, 69

August 27th, 2011
6:18 pm

This is dreaful for GT. We are on triple secret NCAA probation, we had to write checks for $100,000 for cheating and systemic administrative lying and we have Ethel Street and Rueben Houston and Reggie Ball and Tarrant on those rape charges and drug deals and ODs, I am unsure if GT can recover, given the fact that CPJ has not won anything in his three years, no bowls and our humiliating loss to those big Iowa German farm boys and those skinny lil Air Force pilots last December.

Our old 2009 ACC trophy? Collecting bacon grease as a coat rack it is now, at the new Waffle House downtown.

Minnie Pearl

August 27th, 2011
6:18 pm

A message from Georgia Tech to Mark Bradley and the NCAA.

Mark Bradley

August 27th, 2011
6:20 pm

I’m closing these comments.

[...] Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Mark Bradley wrote an editorial Saturday morning looking behind during a Atlanta native’s brief basketball career. Beginning with Crittenton [...]

[...] Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Mark Bradley wrote an editorial Saturday morning looking back at the Atlanta native’s brief basketball career. Beginning with Crittenton starring [...]

[...] is a sad story about a troubled player who may not have gotten the message from his suspension, proving Crittenton may have reached [...]

[...] is a sad story about a troubled player who may not have gotten the message from his suspension, proving Crittenton may have reached [...]

[...] is a sad story about a troubled player who may not have gotten the message from his suspension, proving Crittenton may have reached [...]

[...] By many accounts his early years gave no tickle of the troubles that were to lie ahead: “In 2006 Crittenton graduates from high school — where he’d been a 3.5 student and a member of both the Beta Club and the Future Business Leaders of America — and enrolls at [...]