What's next for Rae Carruth after 19 years behind bars?

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Wednesday, October 24, 2018
Rae Carruth released from prison
Rae Carruth released from prison

Former NFL player Rae Carruth has moved to Pennsylvania after spending nearly two decades in prison on charges stemming from the murder of his pregnant girlfriend.

Amy Worden, a press secretary for the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections, confirmed on Wednesday that Carruth is now under Pennsylvania's jurisdiction.

However, the department is not disclosing exactly where in the state Carruth will be living.

Worden said it is very common for people to move to other states while on probation.

Carruth, a former wide receiver for the Carolina Panthers, was sentenced to 18 to 24 years in 2001 after a jury found him guilty of conspiring to murder Cherica Adams.

Just after 8 a.m. Monday, Carruth walked out of Sampson Correctional Institution in Clinton, North Carolina, got into a white SUV, and drove off.

"I'm excited about just being out of here. I'm nervous just about how I'll be received by the public," Carruth said in a phone interview with ABC affiliate WSOC-TV ahead of his release. "I still have to work. I still have to live. I have to exist out there and it just seems like there is so much hate and negativity toward me. I'm actually somewhat frightened."

Prosecutors said Carruth hired Van Brett Watkins and Michael Kennedy to kill Adams in November 1999, when she was eight months pregnant.

Adams, 24, was following Carruth in a separate vehicle after a movie when Watkins and Kennedy pulled up beside her. Prosecutors said Carruth used his vehicle to block Adams' car while Watkins opened fire on her.

She died four weeks after the shooting. Her son, Chancellor Lee Adams, was born via a cesarean section and had severe injuries.

Chancellor Lee Adams, now 18, has been living with his maternal grandmother, Saundra Adams, and was diagnosed with cerebral palsy. Carruth said he hopes to "make things right" with both of them once he's released.

"I've apologized to Ms. Adams for the loss of her daughter and taken responsibility for what happened," Carruth said. "I don't want to harm Ms. Adams. I guess, honestly, I just want to truly be forgiven."

Saundra Adams told the Charlotte Observer earlier this year that she would "leave the door open" for a potential relationship with Carruth.

"I've forgiven Rae already, but to have any type of relationship with him, there does have to be some repentance," Adams said in February. "And I think this opens the door. But I can say definitively he'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. He will never be raised by a stranger -- someone he doesn't know and who tried to kill him."

Carruth, a 1997 first-round draft pick, was found guilty of conspiracy to commit murder, discharging a firearm into occupied property and attempting to destroy an unborn child, court records show.

Watkins, who pled guilty to second-degree murder, was sentenced to a minimum of 40 years in prison. Kennedy, who drove the car, was released in 2011.

An official with the NC Department of Public Safety said Carruth will have nine months of post release, which means he'll have to meet certain requirements such as meeting with a probation officer.