Patriots’ Star Stefon Diggs Pleads Not Guilty To Strangling His Personal Chef In Pay Dispute Days After Super Bowl
On Friday, New England Patriots star wide receiver Stefon Diggs pleaded not guilty to felony strangulation and other criminal charges in an incident with his personal chef.
The arraignment was postponed until after the Super Bowl so Diggs could play in the championship game. Diggs is next scheduled for a pretrial hearing on April 1.
The chef told officers that she and Diggs had argued about money that Diggs allegedly owed her. The incident happened on December 2 when Diggs “slapped her across the face” and “tried to choke her using the crook of his elbow around her neck,” causing her to be unable to breathe, according to court records.
A day before the hearing, Diggs made a last-minute change in attorneys, appointing Mitchell Schuster.
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Schuster said he “categorically denies these allegations” and that the dispute over money is the motivating factor.
Schuster also added that he doesn’t think there will be a plea deal because he doesn’t “think he is liable or guilty in any way, shape or form.”
Investigators have said that the chef first reported the incident to the police on December 16, two weeks after the altercation.
The Patriots have come out saying they are fully supporting Diggs during this time.
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