Former New Jersey Nets star Jayson Williams was sentenced to five
years in prison Tuesday for the fatal shooting of his limo driver in
2002.
Williams tearfully apologized to the family of Costas "Gus" Christofi during his sentencing hearing Tuesday morning.
"There's not a day I wake up and I don't feel sorry for what I did to Mr. Christofi," Williams said.
He pleaded guilty last month to aggravated assault in the 2002 shooting death of Christofi, a limo driver he had hired.
Under
the plea deal, Williams could have been sentenced to anywhere from 18
months without the possibility of parole to five years in prison.
Williams, who turned 42 on Monday, appeared before Somerset County Superior Court Judge Edward Coleman.
After
sentencing, he will be taken to the Central Reception and Assignment
Facility in Trenton, New Jersey, said Corrections Department
spokeswoman Deirdre Fedkenheuer. There, over the course of several
weeks, he will be photographed, DNA samples will be taken, and he will
be given medical, dental, psychological and educational evaluations,
she said.
Only afterward will a decision be made about where to send him, she said.
Williams waived his right to appeal.
In
return, the state changed the indictment from a charge of reckless
manslaughter to a charge of aggravated assault by recklessly causing
bodily injury to another with a deadly weapon.
Prosecutors said
in January they would recommend Williams be sentenced to five years in
prison on four charges of attempting to cover up the fatal shooting. A
jury convicted him of those charges in 2004.
Though he was
acquitted of more serious counts -- tampering with a witness, tampering
with evidence, fabricating evidence and hindering apprehension or
prosecution -- the jury was unable to reach a decision on the second
count of reckless manslaughter.
Coleman declared a mistrial on
that count, and the state had decided to move forward with a retrial on
that charge when the plea deal was struck.
Williams will serve his sentence concurrently with the 18-month sentence for aggravated assault.
Last
year, the state attorney general took the case from the Hunterdon
County, New Jersey, prosecutor. A spokesman for the attorney general
cited a gag order in declining to discuss the case.
Williams has
been free on $250,000 bail with the condition that he not consume
alcohol and that he check in daily with probation officers.
The
condition that he refrain from alcohol was imposed soon after Williams
was charged with drunken driving in early January after crashing his
SUV in Manhattan. A New York judge ordered him to wear an electronic
bracelet that monitors perspiration to detect whether alcohol has been
consumed.
The fatal shooting occurred February 14, 2002, in the
bedroom of Williams' New Jersey estate. The 55-year-old driver had been
hired to drive the former athlete and several of his friends to dinner
following a sporting event in Pennsylvania.
Afterward, the group, including four members of the Harlem Globetrotters, went back to Williams' home.
The
prosecution contended that Williams was recklessly handling a 12-gauge
shotgun when it discharged and that he and two others tried to make it
look as if Christofi had shot himself.
In January 2003, Williams paid Christofi's family $2.75 million to settle a wrongful death lawsuit.
Williams, who retired in 1999 because of a leg injury, played nine seasons with the Philadelphia 76ers and New Jersey Nets.