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Former NFL player Darren Sharper sentenced to 18 years in drugging and rape case




The former NFL player Darren Sharper has been sentenced to 18 years in prison in a case in which he was accused of drugging and raping as many as 16 women in four states.
Judge Jane Triche Milazzo sentenced Sharper on Thursday. He had pleaded guilty or no-contest in federal court in New Orleans, and state courts in Louisiana, Arizona, California and Nevada to charges arising from the allegations of drugging and raping women.
Prosecutors suggested a nine-year prison term for Sharper under a multi-jurisdictional plea deal, but Milazzo rejected it as too lenient in June. The sentence was 15 months short of the maximum. He was also fined $20,000.
Sharper pleaded guilty in federal court to three counts of distributing drugs with rape as the aim. He or his friend Brandon Licciardi, a former sheriff’s deputy in neighboring St Bernard Parish, put anti-anxiety drugs or sedatives into women’s drinks so they could rape them, according to a 15-page statement signed as part of that plea.
Sharper’s voice thickened and broke as he said he apologized “a thousand times” to the women he abused and to his family and friends. “I lived my life right for 38 years and then I took this path,” he said. Sharper said he’s still trying to figure out why he did.
Milazzo has scheduled sentencing on 13 October for Licciardi and a second New Orleans codefendant, Erik Nunez. Charges around the country involve nine victims, but Milazzo has said in court that there may be as many as 16.
Like Sharper, Licciardi and Nunez admitted distributing drugs with the intent to commit rape. Their plea agreements say Licciardi has accepted a 17-year sentence, with 10 years for Nunez.
Sharper was named All-Pro six times and chosen for the Pro Bowl five times during a career that included stints with the Green Bay Packers and Minnesota Vikings. He played in two Super Bowls, one with the Packers as a rookie and one with New Orleans Saints when they won in 2010.
He ended a 14-year career in 2011. He was working as an NFL network analyst when women began telling police in several cities similar stories of blacking out while drinking with him and waking up groggy to find they had been sexually assaulted.
A woman he admitted to drugging and raping made an emotional statement before he was sentenced.
She said Sharper was so arrogant and “twisted” that he kept drugging and raping women even after he knew the attack on her was being investigated. 
She said a mistake is something that happens once and is corrected, but it was a way of life for Sharper and his friends.
Her voice broke often during her long statement.
Her last words to him were: “Go to hell.”

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