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What Happened to Lorenzen Wright?

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If they heard the gun shots on July 19, why did it take 9 days to find him, especially since the shots were heard...

When i lived in glendale i would hear gun shots on almost a nightly basis, doesnt mean there was a body to be found every night. Unfortunetely, in some neigborhoods, gun shots are so frequent that they dont send off alarm bells or search parties.

PS, RIP Lorenzon. You were a class act. You deserved better.
 
Damn man, I think that avatar might be taking it a tad too far, no?
Yea, that other chick was way hotter....

Anyways, I wish Nancy Grace would get on this case... That bitch is crazy and will bring down the justice hammer...
 
When i lived in glendale i would hear gun shots on almost a nightly basis, doesnt mean there was a body to be found every night. Unfortunetely, in some neigborhoods, gun shots are so frequent that they dont send off alarm bells or search parties.

PS, RIP Lorenzon. You were a class act. You deserved better.

I would agree with you, but it was a 911 call.

A 911 call cut short when you heard gunshots and you don't go investigate?
 
I would agree with you, but it was a 911 call.

A 911 call cut short when you heard gunshots and you don't go investigate?

If they didnt know where the call was coming from exactly, how do they investigate? A short call from a cell phone probably wasnt long enough to catch which tower it came from. And even if you did, that would nail it down to what, 3-5 square mile radius? Still a huge area to cover.

Sadly, no police force would have the man power to cover such a search for gun shots heard nor any really good way of narrowing it down. It seems like they should be able to morrally, but when faced with the reality of the limmitations of the technology and man power they simply cant.
 
If they didnt know where the call was coming from exactly, how do they investigate? A short call from a cell phone probably wasnt long enough to catch which tower it came from. And even if you did, that would nail it down to what, 3-5 square mile radius? Still a huge area to cover.

The odd thing is that the cops had said for a few days that there was no foul play suspected in the disappearance but now a source tells the newspaper that a 911 call with gunshots came from Wright's cell phone.

Either they are very slow to act on information, or the police were being quiet about their investigation (and perhaps for good reason in case they thought keeping it quiet would help with the investigation).

I really hope they don't release that call, although I'm sure someone will.
 
Reason #8,429 not live in Memphis.
 
So, so, SO! sad!

It certainly sounds suspicious in one way or another. I hope it was more of just random muggimg like thing, than a full out hit on him for some srtupid reason. Although no news could be good news...:mad:
 
this was just posted on RealGM

"As a person that was at the scene of the crime and spoke with investigators I can assure you that the Real GM article stating that Wright died from a self-inflicted gun shot wound is 100% inaccurate."
 
Not sure why, but for once I don't feel the need to make an inappropriate joke. Don't quite understand it, but I really feel bad about this guy. He seemed like a quality guy and I'm sorry to hear about his financial problems towards the end there.

I'll be interested to see what the circumstances were. It sounds very tragic thus far.
 
Call me crazy but at least 12 gunshot wounds doesn't sound like suicide.

RIP
 
Doesn't sound like suicide to me, either.

Regardless of what happened, these inhuman scumbags who thuggishly think it's okay to take a person's life or that it's somehow cool to irritate me greatly. My blood just boils reading these stories.
 
Re: Former Cavalier Lorenzen Wright Missing

Missing Memphis basketball star Lorenzen Wright found dead
* By Kristina Goetz, Beth Warren
* Memphis Commercial Appeal
* Posted July 28, 2010 at 3:23 p.m., updated July 28, 2010 at 11:24 p.m.


In the early hours of July 19, a Germantown dispatcher received a 911 call from Lorenzen Wright's cell phone.

The dispatcher heard a garbled male voice utter an expletive, then at least 10 gunshots.

"Hello? Hello? Can you hear me?" the dispatcher asked.

Then the phone went dead.

The dispatcher called back. No one answered.


Nine days later, Wright's body was found in a wooded area of southeast Memphis, two law enforcement sources confirmed Wednesday afternoon.

The former basketball star went missing on July 19, just hours before he was supposed to ride back to his townhouse in the Atlanta area with a friend and his six children.

Hundreds of Wright's friends and fans, including kids on bicycles and women pushing strollers, rushed to the scene Wednesday where the body was found, in an area across the road from the TPC Southwind golf course near Hacks Cross and Winchester. Cars lined Hacks Cross as far as the eye could see, some with their lights flashing.

Some people cried and watched as a news helicopter circled overhead. Some took photos of police officers and each other with cell phones.

Police cars stopped onlookers from getting too close to the crime scene as they walked up the winding road of a planned office park nearby. One officer said the scene reminded him of the day Elvis died, when fans flocked to the gates of Graceland.

The Wright family issued a statement Wednesday night through a cousin of Wright, Camella Logan.

"Lorenzen's family has come together to mourn his loss and honor his legacy," the statement said. "We appreciate your thoughts, prayers and condolences as they are comforting at this very difficult time. Additionally, we ask that you please respect our privacy as we try to cope with his sudden loss."

Wright's mother, Deborah Marion, arrived at the scene Wednesday night with a handful of family members. She crossed the crime scene tape and tried to talk to police when she was told to move back.

Eventually, two officers let her through. She started running down the road toward the crime scene before being stopped by an officer.

She spoke with police, then walked straight to a van without speaking to anyone.

Marion lived nearby and Wright often used the little-known road through the wooded area -- known as Callis Cutoff -- as a shortcut to her home.

"RIP Memphis Tiger alum Lorenzen Wright," former Tiger Chris Douglas-Roberts, now of the Milwaukee Bucks, posted on his Twitter account.

Wright, 34, described by friends as a dedicated father, leaves behind two daughters and four sons, ages 4 to 15.

He visited his children July 18 at his former wife's home in Collierville. He was supposed to meet them the next day to take them back to his home in an affluent northern suburb of Atlanta so they could spend the rest of the summer with him, said family friend Jeremy Orange.

The children had spent most of the summer with their father, who took them to the movies, amusement parks and the swimming pool and helped them with their basketball skills, Orange said.

Wright had asked Orange to drive the children to their mom's Memphis home July 16 because oldest daughter Loren, 14, was competing in a beauty contest. Orange said Wright, known to friends as "Ren," hugged each child and gave Loren a kiss goodbye as they left the Atlanta area.

Wright, who hadn't been scheduled to come to Memphis, could be spontaneous.

His roommate, Michael Gipson, dropped him off at the Atlanta airport to fly to Memphis on July 18, and Wright planned to catch a ride back with Orange and his children the next day, Gipson said.

Antavio Brigance, Wright's longtime barber, said Wright came into his shop not long before he disappeared.

"He was laughing, cheerful and bubbly," he said.

After his haircut, Wright left with a friend in a silver, older-model Chrysler 300, said Brigance, who declined to describe the other person in the car.

According to the missing-persons report filed by his mother, Wright was last seen leaving his former wife's house on Whisperwood Drive at about 2 a.m. July19.

Four days later, the family reported the disappearance of the 6-foot-11 power forward to Collierville police.

One factor that could have put him in jeopardy: He was known to carry a wad of cash, according to the missing-persons report.

"He had been toting some money at the barbershop," Brigance said.

Orange estimated Wright was carrying between $2,000 and $3,000 in big bills. Police have not said if robbery is a possible motive in the slaying.

His friends have said they don't know why anyone would harm Wright.

"He's a relaxed person. I've never seen him mad or upset," Orange said. "I've known people from the NBA who are real stuck-up and cocky. That man is not like that."

Gipson agreed.

"I don't think he had any enemies," he said.

Wright recently had endured some tough times, with a fractured thumb that had halted his NBA career, financial woes and a divorce finalized in January.

But his roommate said he remained positive, that he had begun dating again and he had two NBA teams inviting him to tryouts. Wright was scheduled to fly to Israel last weekend to try out for a team there, prompting his agent to make several calls searching for him, Gipson said.

The University of Memphis player joined the NBA in 1996 as the Los Angeles Clippers' No. 7 draft pick. He joined the Grizzlies in 2001 and spent five seasons in Memphis, where he had dreamed of retiring.

Attorney Gail Mathes, who represented the athlete's ex-wife, Sherra Robinson Wright, 39, during the couple's divorce, said he remained kind during the process and continued to put the children's interests first.

"Man, he loves those kids and they love him," Orange said."He has that father instinct.

"When I'm driving them, he calls to tell me: 'Take care of my babies.'"​

* * * * * * *


New Details In The Lorenzen Wright Mystery
Reported by: Kevin Holmes
Email: kholmes@myeyewitnessnews.com
Last Update: 7:24 am


MEMPHIS, TN – A body was found in Southeast Memphis near Hacks Cross and Winchester; Specifically, about a half mile northwest of FedEx World Headquarters in a thickly wooded area behind an apartment complex. Sources close to the family tell myEyewtinessNews.com it is former NBA Player Lorenzen Wright.

Sources also tell myEyewitnessNews.com that police have a recording of a call from Wright’s cell phone that may have captured the sound of the gunshots that killed him. According to our sources, Germantown Police received a call from Wright’s cell phone about 1:00a.m., July 19, 2010. It begins with someone who sounds scared shouting two expletives followed by several gunshots, and then silence as the 911 dispatcher keeps saying “hello, hello, I’ve got nothing but gunshots.”

Family and friends are having a difficult time coming to terms with this. The discovery of the body was made July 28, 2010 and news spread fast as hundreds showed up including former teammates and former Memphis Tigers to see for themselves.

“I cried, the emotions hit me immediately,” former Memphis Tiger and NBA Star Penny Hardaway tells myEyewitnessNews.com. “And it’s sad because we lost a good person and a brother.”

According to friends and family, Wright’s body was found in a wooded area behind the Fieldstone Apartments in Southeast Memphis. That’s where homicide detectives spent hours searching for evidence. Close friend Stan McKinley is in shock over the discovery. “To end his career and his life like this here in some woods, that’s not good. You don’t do a dog like this. It’s just a really sad day for the city as a whole.”

The former Memphis Tiger and Grizzly was last seen July 18, 2010 and was reported missing to police July 22, 2010. Wright’s mother and family arrived to the scene and spoke with detectives, possibly to make a positive ID on Lorenzen. As the family searches for comfort, police search for answers.

“This brother has six kids,” McKinley tells myEyewitnessNews.com. “For that reason alone, his friends need closure, his fraternity brothers need closure, but for the kids alone, they need to know what happened to their father.”​
 
Today's report from Memphis:

Police: Wright's death a homicide by gunshot
By Kristina Goetz, Beth Warren
Posted July 29, 2010 at 1:44 p.m.
EmailDiscussShare »PrintAAA

The Memphis Police Department has just announced that the death of former NBA star Lorenzen Wright was a homicide by gunshot wound. He was officially identified by the Shelby County Medical Examiner through dental records, according to a police statement.

The police department also confirmed that a 911 call was placed from Wright's phone in the early hours of July 19.

"After extensive examination investigators determined that the call was made from the area south of Poplar Pike and west of Hacks Cross Road," the statement read.

For more than a week, according to source, suburban police did not make the connection between a 911 call in which gunshots were heard and Wright's disappearance.

Sources have told The Commercial Appeal that the call came to Germantown in the early morning hours of July 19. A male voice could be heard uttering an expletive. Then at least 10 gunshots were heard in the background.

The call came from a cell phone in the possession of Wright, whose body was found Wednesday in a wooded area in Southeast Memphis.

The newspaper has been unable to determine who owned the phone and, as a result, how it registered at the 911 center. The Germantown dispatcher called the number back, but no one answered. It is not known whether she reported the incident and a further investigation ensued.

Three days later, on July 22, Wright’s family reported the former NBA star missing to Collierville police. For days, police officials there said they did not believe “foul play” was involved.

However, sources told the newspaper that once the 911 call was disclosed, and investigators from Memphis and Shelby County were called to assist, Wright’s body was quickly located.

Information about the call apparently came late Tuesday and the agencies met Wednesday — 9 days after the 911 call. Wright’s body was discovered a few hours later by a Shelby County Sheriff's Department cadaver dog. Collierville police and town officials wouldn’t say today when they were notified by Germantown police of a 911 call

Early today, a team of roughly 70 officers from the Memphis Police Department trudged through the site where Wright’s body was found, looking for evidence. Yellow police tape kept onlookers and reporters at least two football fields away from the crime scene. A police helicopter landed at the scene around 12:30 p.m.

Wright’s mother also was on the scene.

“I wanted to see the last steps of my son, the last steps my son ever took. He was my first born child. I really wanted to see his last steps,” said Deborah Marion.

She described what the ordeal has been like. “It’s crazy. It’s like I’m in a dream.”

Marion walked a couple hundred yards up a winding road to the site. “I was wondering how they would get a 6’11’’ guy inside of the fence.”

Memphis Police officers allowed reporters back to the site this afternoon. Just around the bend of a long driveway, reporters and photographers walked in high grass and weeds into a clearing about 70 yards wide. About 150 to 200 yards ahead just short of a wooded area is where a cadaver dog found the remains covered in brush. Behind a small hill, a black patch of grass in the outline of Wright’s body suggests he was lying with his knees bent and one arm near his face.

On Monday, Collierville Police Chief Larry Goodwin said the town had no reason to suspect foul play in Wright’s disappearance. While no one would discuss when the department was made aware of the emergency call, the town issued a press release Thursday that said: “All statements made in connection with the missing person report filed on Lorenzen Wright are factually accurate."

Since the body believed to be that of Wright was found in Memphis, Collierville no longer has jurisdiction over the case. The suburban police department referred all calls to MPD.

The Germantown Police Chief has not returned calls. MPD has released no information.

A lawyer representing the Wright family in previous civil matters said the lack of communication between neighboring jurisdictions was inexcusable.

“It is appalling the Germantown Police Department did not follow up on that 911 call,” said attorney Gail Mathes. “That is a tragic situation with many, many more hours of all the anxiety the family went through.”

The attorney also pointed to the lost time investigating the homicide. Within law enforcement circles, there’s a shared belief that the most crucial time to solve a slaying is within the first 48 hours.

http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2010/jul/29/police-missed-connection-911-call-lorenzen-wright/
 
From the Memphis papers:

Police: Wright's death a homicide by gunshot
By Kristina Goetz, Beth Warren
Posted July 29, 2010 at 1:44 p.m., updated July 29, 2010 at 11:12 p.m.

Sherra Robinson Wright opened her front door one day in recent weeks to find three men she had never seen before, each with guns tucked in their waistbands.

They looked serious and wanted to know if her ex-husband, former NBA star Lorenzen Wright, 34, happened to be inside the Whisperwood Drive home visiting his six children.

No, she assured them, and they drove away.

The frightened Collierville mom rushed to tell her divorce attorney, Gail Mathes, about the scary ordeal and her fears for herself, her children and the ex-husband she still loved, Mathes said.

A few weeks later, the athlete made an impromptu visit from his Atlanta-area home to Memphis. A day after his flight arrived, he was gunned down.

Memphis police released a statement Thursday verifying Wright's July 19 death was a homicide caused by gunfire, but they haven't said if they have any suspects or how many bullets struck him.

It's unknown whether the gunmen who were reportedly looking for Wright at his ex-wife's home had any involvement in his death or whether the incident she described to her attorney was ever reported to police.

It's also unknown whether Sherra Wright has given a statement since her ex-husband's body was discovered Wednesday afternoon.

Early Thursday, about 70 officers trudged over the site where the body was found, hunting for evidence while a police helicopter circled above. Yellow police tape kept reporters and onlookers a distance the length of two football fields away.

The victim's mother, Deborah Marion, went to the scene.

"I wanted to see the last steps of my son, the last steps my son ever took. He was my first-born child. I really wanted to see his last steps," she said.

It has been tough, she said: "It's crazy. It's like I'm in a dream."

Marion walked a couple hundred yards up a winding road near the site.

"I was wondering how they would get a 6-11 guy inside of the fence," she said, referring to her son's height.

By afternoon, police allowed reporters to walk closer to the crime scene, around the bend of a long driveway, past high grass and weeds and into a clearing about 70 yards wide. Atop a small hill, just short of a wooded area, a cadaver dog found the remains, initially hidden from view by thick brush.

A black patch of grass in the outline of Wright's body suggested he was lying with his knees bent and one arm near his face.

At Wright's mother's house, relatives and friends crowded in to comfort one another.

Lorenzo Searcy, Wright's great-uncle and namesake, said community support and the family's faith in God are helping them cope.

"We would love to thank everybody for the love and their consideration and their condolences," he said. "Everybody is holding up pretty good.

"If you believe in God then you must believe that He lets nothing happen without His will."

Searcy has fond memories of Wright.

"Since I can remember -- when I was taller than he, and I'm 6-2, and when I used to hug him and he came up to my chest -- he always wanted to play in the NBA. He realized his dream ... and that's something a lot of us don't get a chance to do."

Despite Lorenzen Wright's success, his uncle said he remained down-to-earth.

"He was good. He was kind. He was gentle. ... Anybody could approach him," he said.

Wright's roommate in Smyrna, Ga., a northern suburb of Atlanta, said Wright never told him about an incident with gunmen or anyone he may have feared.

"I never heard anything like that," Michael Gipson said Thursday, a day after learning of his roommate's slaying.

"I'm not worried about the 'why' right now," Gipson said. "He's with God. The 'why' will come out later."

Wright openly talked about his faith, often reading devotionals before games during his five-year stint with the Memphis Grizzlies.

During one out-of-town game in 2003, Wright told a reporter how it helped him gear up for battle on the court: "This Scripture is about understanding your ability over the devil."

http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2010/jul/29/police-missed-connection-911-call-lorenzen-wright/
 
Lawyer: Armed Men Were Looking For Wright

MEMPHIS, Tenn.(AP) An attorney says three armed men looking for Lorenzen Wright showed up at the home of the former NBA player's ex-wife about six weeks before he was found shot to death.

Lawyer Gail Mathes says her client, Sherra Wright, was afraid for herself and her children so kept quiet about the encounter until Monday. She then alerted police in the Memphis suburb of Collierville.

Mathes says the men, dressed in sport coats with weapons in view, threatened Sherra Wright and her family if she told anyone about the visit. Mathes' account was first reported by The Commercial Appeal.

Lorenzen Wright's body was found Wednesday in woods in southeast Memphis. He had been missing since July 18, when he left his ex-wife's house around midnight with an unidentified person.

Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/20...killing.ap/index.html?eref=sihp#ixzz0vCjMH98I


Sounds like there might be some back dealing or a "business" deal gone bad...this is crazy stuff.
 

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