Judge dismisses 2 charges against Steelers' Reed
A judge on Monday dismissed charges of simple assault and resisting
arrest against Steelers kicker Jeff Reed, who was accused of
raising his fists at a Pittsburgh police officer when ordered back
in his vehicle as police dealt with a teammate.
The two misdemeanor charges dismissed by state District Judge
Richard King at Reed's preliminary hearing were the most serious he
faced. King postponed for six weeks a decision on whether to hold
Reed for trial on charges of disorderly conduct and public
drunkenness.
King directed Reed to perform 40 hours of community service
and said he would consider dropping the two summary charges if Reed
complies.
The judge said ``something was there'' between Reed and
police on Oct. 18, several hours after the Steelers beat Cleveland
27-14, but it didn't rise to the level of simple assault or
resisting arrest.
King suggested the conflict could have been avoided if Reed
hadn't felt the need to ``butt in'' when police were preparing to
cite Reed's teammate, backup tight end Matt Spaeth, for allegedly
urinating in a parking lot near Heinz Field.
Reed declined to comment, but his attorney, Robert DelGreco
Jr., said Reed has been humbled.
``It hurts him that there are people out there that might
think that he squared up and wanted to fight cops or actually
fought cops. That's not Jeff Reed,'' DelGreco said.
During the roughly half-hour hearing, three Pittsburgh police
officers gave testimony at odds with an account given at DelGreco's
request by an off-duty state trooper who was there.
King said he wanted Reed to do community service because the
fines for the summary offenses -- $300 on each count -- would
essentially be meaningless to Reed.
DelGreco said while the money wasn't the issue, Reed could
face more serious sanctions from the NFL if he were to be found
guilty. He didn't have details.
It was Reed's second arrest last year. He paid $543 in fines
and restitution after pleading guilty to disorderly conduct and
criminal mischief for damaging a paper towel dispenser in a
Pittsburgh-area convenience store bathroom in February, a few weeks
after the Steelers won the Super Bowl.