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Henry Ruggs posts bond in fatal DUI case - Las Vegas Review-Journal

Former Raiders star Henry Ruggs posted bond Wednesday afternoon, shortly after making his initial court appearance in Las Vegas in connection with a fiery crash that killed a woman, court records show.

But as of about 1 p.m., Las Vegas police jail records indicate that he remained at Clark County Detention Center.

A judge on Wednesday ordered Ruggs, 22, held on $150,000 bail and the highest level of electronic monitoring if released. He also would be required to surrender his passport and would be prohibited from driving and consuming alcohol or drugs.

Chief Deputy District Attorney Eric Bauman said Ruggs, who attended court wearing a neck brace and sitting in a wheelchair, was traveling at 156 mph about two seconds before the pre-dawn crash on Tuesday. Investigators determined the car was at 127 mph when the airbags deployed.

“I cannot recall a speed that high in my career on the bench,” Justice of the Peace Joe Bonaventure said.

A Metropolitan Police Department report released Wednesday identified the woman killed in the crash as 23-year-old Tina Tintor. The woman’s dog also died in the crash, prosecutors said.

Prosecutors had requested a $1 million bail, which defense attorney David Chesnoff called an “excessive” amount.

“What we have, your honor, is a young man who has never been in trouble before,” Chesnoff told the judge.

Bauman said Ruggs’ blood alcohol level was 0.16 percent, twice the legal limit for drivers in Nevada, and a loaded gun was found on the driver’s side floorboard of the car.

Ruggs was booked Tuesday afternoon at the county jail and is facing charges of DUI resulting in death and reckless driving, according to Metro records.

“This is a very tragic and sad day in this community,” Clark County District Attorney Steve Wolfson told reporters after Wednesday’s court hearing. “A woman lost her life. Another person perhaps lost his career, perhaps (is) going to prison. This was a very, very ugly day, yesterday morning.”

Wolfson said Ruggs may face an additional felony DUI charge related to injuries suffered by his girlfriend, who was a passenger in the car. Prosecutors also may file a charge of possession of a firearm while intoxicated, Wolfson said.

Prosecutors are expected to file formal charges next week.

DUI resulting in death or serious injury carries a maximum prison term of 20 years, while reckless driving carries a maximum sentence of six years.

Police said Ruggs was driving a 2020 Chevrolet Corvette just before 3:40 a.m. Tuesday in a residential area on Rainbow Boulevard when he veered into the right lane and slammed into the back of Tintor’s Toyota.

The impact pushed the Toyota, which burst into flames, more than 570 feet before it came to rest near the intersection of Spring Valley Parkway, according to Ruggs’ arrest report.

Bauman said Tintor and her dog died “as a result of the fire caused by the crash.”

Ruggs was “argumentative and uncooperative” with police and other first responders, Bauman said. According to Ruggs’ arrest report, he refused to participate in a field sobriety test, and instead, two blood draws were taken at the hospital.

His girlfriend, Kiara Je’nai Kilgo-Washington, who goes by the name Rudy Washington, also was taken to the hospital. Wolfson said he was told that Ruggs had suffered leg injuries and that Washington had suffered a “significant” wrist injury.

Washington and Ruggs have a 3-year-old child together, prosecutors said.

Chesnoff told reporters outside the courtroom that he and co-counsel Richard Schonfeld are conducting their own investigation into the crash.

“We are going to adjudicate in the courtroom,” Chesnoff said. “We are not going to adjudicate it in the street.”

As Chesnoff spoke to reporters, an unidentified man yelled “shameful” and “shameful to protect that guy.”

Chesnoff responded: “It’s America, and people are entitled to lawyers.”

Tintor’s relatives who attended the hearing declined to speak with a reporter.

A video posted Monday night to Ruggs’ public Snapchat account showed that he was at Topgolf Las Vegas hours before the crash, which happened a few miles away from his $1.1 million home, county property records show.

Wolfson said Wednesday that “there’s some evidence to suggest” that Ruggs went to a friend’s house after Topgolf.

Bauman told the judge that the crash is “particularly tragic” because the NFL Players Association has offered free rideshare services to members since 2013, “specifically to prevent tragedies such as this.”

Shortly before 9 p.m. Tuesday, the Raiders Twitter account posted that Ruggs had been released from the team.

In recent years, prosecutors have brought murder charges against people accused in high-profile DUI fatality cases, but the Nevada Supreme Court in September 2020 barred the district attorney’s office from engaging in the practice.

The decision stemmed from a case in which officials said a man caused a fatal crash while driving with marijuana in his system at speeds between 70 and 142 mph in a residential neighborhood.

Wolfson said Wednesday that he respects the Supreme Court decision but that legislators should look to increase the maximum sentence in fatal DUI cases.

He told reporters that people need to treat driving while impaired as a “serious matter” and to “make a good choice” instead.

“There’s rideshare. There’s a designated driver. There’s a taxi. There’s so many alternatives,” Wolfson said.

Contact Katelyn Newberg at knewberg@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0240. Follow @k_newberg on Twitter. Review-Journal staff writer Glenn Puit and Rio Lacnalale contributed to this report.

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