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Bryant recanted to anyone. He said that, by law,

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The news that Novak Djokovic and coach Boris Becker had split up after three successful years was the headline-maker to a season of shocking coaching changes, but it was just the crowning touch.Johanna Konta had a spectacular rise into the top 10 in the past 15 months under the guidance of Spanish coach Esteban Carril. His reward? Fired.ATP No. 3 Milos Raonic upset Roger Federer en route to the Wimbledon final. Raonics assistant coach Carlos Moya also looked on and counseled Raonic as he came within a point of knocking out Andy Murray -- and taking his place opposite Djokovic in the championship match of the ATP World Tour Finals. Soon it was bye-bye, Moya.Thomas Hogstedt coached Eugenie Bouchard from 2015 to mid-2016 and then led Madison Keys to a career-high No. 8 ranking, starting this past May. His reward: walking papers.And how about Karolina Pliskova, a US Open finalist riding a career-high No. 6 ranking, firing the coach who helped get her there, Jiri Vanek, who was hired only two years ago? He quickly landed a job with Pliskovas fellow Czech and rival Petra Kvitova -- while Pliskova hired the coach Kvitova let go in January, David Kotyza.A person who didnt know better might conclude that the surest way for a coach to keep his job these days is to make sure his players ranking drops 20 spots and he or she loses in the first week at all four majors.The really surprising WTA changes are the ones involving Pliskova and Konta, Craig Kardon, coach of Coco Vandeweghe, told ESPN.com. They had great success, which suggests theres more there than meets the eye. It could be the amount of travel. It could be money. It could be how they get along. The turnover is understandable; the big question always is, Why?The sheer amount of turnover this year might seem puzzling, especially in light of the success many of the players in question have enjoyed. But theres been a sea change in the sport. Coaches used to get fired when players results peaked or tailed off. Now they are dismissed more easily when a player feels a new voice might help move him or her to the next level.The domino effect has become more visible over the years. Players watch each other and feel increased pressure to make moves to keep up with their rivals. Also, the pool of available, quality coaches is smaller than the number of talented players. The Czechs, for example, are a fairly tight-knit, if competitive, group. Kotyzas availability since early in the year might have been on Pliskovas mind all along. At the elite level, each coaching change sometimes involves two coaches and two players.Theres another argument, though:Todays players cant seem to find a coaching match, and thats a real problem, said Pam Shriver, 21-time Grand Slam doubles champion and ESPN tennis analyst. Madison Keys, Sloane Stephens, Eugenie Bouchard. You cannot have that many [coaches]. I think its a little bit of our instant gratification; nobody has the patience in this day and age.But dont expect more than the boilerplate response Raonic posted on Instagram (I wish [Moya] all the best) if youre looking for answers. For, as Kardon said, Coaches dont talk that much among ourselves about our disagreements with our players, and we dont bad-mouth other coaches or their players.Paul Annacone, whose winning record as the coach of Roger Federer, Pete Sampras and Tim Henman is matched only by his record of longevity with those men, offered another perspective:When you become a San Antonio Spur, you have to learn the system of head coach Gregg Popovich, said Annacone, who is a Tennis Channel analyst. That takes time. But tennis is an individual sport, so the direct communication really speeds process. It also means it makes it go stale more quickly.How then did Annacone end up working with Sampras for six consecutive years and Federer for 3??Apart from bringing something positive on the coaching side, which obviously a lot of the guys who parted with their players this year did do, you have to keep the relationship dynamic, Annacone said. You have to keep communication fresh and candid, even if that means asking if its time to freshen things up, to make some changes or do something differently.Or as Shriver asked, Whats wrong with [coaching] relationships that ride out good and bad?Although Annacone also was surprised by many of the year-end coaching changes, his first instinct is to give the players the benefit of the doubt. He said of Konta, It just seems to be a case of the relationship getting stale. Shes a thoughtful person. Sure shes capable of making a mistake, but I would be shocked if she did anything rash or short-sighted.For most players, struggling to make it to the elite top-10 level or better, the relationship with a coach is an intense one full of dramatic highs and lows. Financial or logistical realities might demand an excess of everyday contact or call for irritating sacrifices. The constant travel and daily practice routine can become a grind.Coaches often are the last to know when the relationship isnt working anymore.Id say its the coach saying Lets move on only about 10 percent of the time, Annacone said. Coaches are wedded to the idea of improving their players. They dont like to give up. They also like to keep their jobs.?Players get tired of a familiar voice telling them to do the same thing over and over, which is a lot of what most coaches do because tennis is a game of repetition and execution. A pro wants to hear new voices, partly because, at the top-100 level, the fresh insights and new ideas any coach can bring to the table are limited. Successful coaches are high-value targets, and one-on-one relationships can quickly burn out. Its a volatile combination.As the coaching industry has matured, and coaches have moved around, it has reached the point where learning about rivals from their former coaches might play a part in the hiring process. Its almost like a form of insider trading.Who can forget the sight of Sascha Bajin, Serena Williams former hitting partner, turning up in the coaching box of Victoria Azarenka? Or the supercharged atmosphere that surrounded the Australian Open match between Andy Murray and Tomas Berdych?after Berdych hired Murrays former pal and coach, Dani Vallverdu.It might seem like a head game sometimes, but not very much, said Kardon, who also coached Martina Navratilova in some of her glory years. Theres something to be said for having the services of someone who has coached the very top players.Kardon, who also worked at one point with ATP pro Vince Spadea added, Vince just wanted to know about [Navratilovas] training methods, her habits, her champions mentality. Thats legitimate, its a good way to go.A year of focused, us-against-the-world labor in the pro trenches exposes the character of both coach and player. Its difficult to sustain the relationship if the character or personality components dont mesh after the initial learning phase is done.Hogstedt did excellent work with 21-year-old Keys in 2016 and has an astute tennis mind, but hes better known for his high-skill nuts-and-bolts approach than as a mentor for young players. It might explain the breakup.If a coaching relationship is to endure beyond that 12-month honeymoon phase, there has to be a real bond and a lot of communication.You have to ask the tough questions, Annacone said. Take yourself out of it, as if you werent the coach.When Federer and Annacone finally parted, it was after nearly four years together, over lunch in a waterside restaurant at Federers training base in Dubai. The men talked through it; they even discussed Annacones potential successors. Both men knew the time had come.Unlike so many of todays abrupt player-coach breakups, at least that partnership was given a chance to succeed. Cheap Air Max 97 Brown China . General manager Jarmo Kekalainen told Aaron Portzline of The Columbus Dispatch on Friday that he wants to see Gaboriks contributions go beyond the scoresheet before considering a long-term deal for the soon-to-be unrestricted free agent. Cheap Air Max 97 Green China . At a Manhattan federal court hearing, attorney Jordan Siev said his law office has gotten more evidence nearly every day to support its lawsuit accusing MLB and Selig of going on a "witch hunt" to ruin Rodriguezs reputation and career. He said the defendants went "way over the line. http://www.cheapairmax97fromchina.com/ . Halladay signed a one-day contract with the Toronto Blue Jays on Monday that allowed the veteran right-hander to retire as a member of team with which he broke into the majors and spent the bulk of his distinguished 16-year career. Cheap Air Max 97 Yellow China . Its the second straight game Bell has scored in extra time for Kelowna, which beat the Brandon Wheat Kings 6-5 on Friday, and he now has four game-winning goals on the season. Cheap Air Max 97 Grey China . LOUIS -- St. Its Dec. 4, and the Ranger College mens basketball team is visiting Cedar Valley, just outside of Dallas. Midway through the second half, a woman walks into the gym with her young son and daughter, all of them carrying signs.Justice for Troy Causey.Johnathan Turner #44 should be in jail, not on the court!! Justice for Troy.The womans sign declares that her son, Troy Causey, killed at 18, deserves justice.As Tammy Simpson leads her children slowly up the sideline, the gym falls silent. The players stop and look around, confused. Two referees confer at midcourt while a third stands with the basketball in his hand. No one is sure what to do.On the visitors bench, Johnathan Turner, No. 44, sees Simpson and her children, then struggles to find somewhere else to look -- at the floor, the scoreboard, his teammates, anywhere.They walk the length of the court, then back. After about 90 seconds, someone in a suit asks Simpson to leave. Without responding, she takes the children back outside.Turners teammates, who have played with him for only a few months, pat him on the shoulder and the leg. He looks as if he wants to say something, but he cant figure out what.He did kill her son. He swears it was an accident. Causey was his best friend, after all. They went to rival Dallas high schools but -- for reasons that would be picked over and analyzed for months -- had been living in the same house with a distant cousin of Causeys.People say they were like brothers, two lanky and talented big men, sleeping on old mattresses in the garage, basketball clothes strewn on their beds and the floor. Turner is 6-foot-7, Causey was 6-5, and both were hoping to get basketball scholarships to the same college.But on the night of March 23, 2014, everything changed. They got into an argument and went outside the house to settle it, and Turner landed a punch to Causeys mouth, knocking him down so hard he cracked his skull on the street.None of that is in dispute. But what happened next is. Police would say -- and Simpson would come to believe -- that Turner, and possibly another man, kicked Causeys head in while he was lying semiconscious on the ground. Turner says that never happened, that his friends death was a terrible accident.Those moments while Causey was on the ground became the focal point of a Dallas police investigation: If Turner did kick his friend, then he could face murder charges; if not, then, under Texas law, he might not be charged with anything. Spurred on by the medical examiners findings, a detective would for weeks cajole, plead with, confront and even shock witnesses, all in search of the story he knew must be right.The paths Simpson and Turner have traveled the past two years have never taken them far from those moments. But the question remains: What happened while Troy Causey was lying on the ground?TAMMY SIMPSON raised Troy mostly by herself, doing her best to scrape by with work in law offices and real estate. From the time he was born, basketball was at the core of their relationship. She had played in community college, and when I had Troy, I was back on the court six weeks after, not a day late, she says. And Troy was right there in the stroller watching me.She later refereed games and coached, and it soon became clear that her son was better than most of the other boys. By age 12, he stood more than 6 feet tall. He was a beast, Simpson says. Six-five wingspan, and he was known for his shot-blocking skills. Everything that came inside was going back out.For all his on-court success, Causey struggled in school. He talked back to teachers, got into fights and ditched class. As he entered his local high school, he was put on the special-education track. He was emotionally disturbed is what they called it, Simpson says. Causey fell so hopelessly behind in his studies that he became ineligible for high school basketball and, in Simpsons words, just gave up academically.In 2011, Tammy married Roferrel Simpson, giving 15-year-old Troy the live-in father she always wanted him to have. But when Troy was 16, he got into a fight with his stepfather and was charged with assault. After missing several meetings with a juvenile probation officer and skipping a court appearance, he spent eight months in a juvenile detention facility, the Dallas County Youth Village. Simpson says it was around this time that John Burley, considered an up-and-coming basketball coach at Dallas Wilmer-Hutchins High School, first contacted her son. Burley has denied any contact while Causey was incarcerated -- recruiting is against the rules -- and records obtained from the Youth Village contain statements from employees that say Burley did not visit him there. Whatever the case, when Causey was released, he enrolled at Wilmer-Hutchins.Causey did not live in the schools district and should not have been able to play there. But Simpson says she believed that the coach, so interested in her son, could finally set him on the right track. Causey registered under a phony address and, in September, moved into a house just 3 miles from the school with a woman named Jeanee Miles, who was in a romantic relationship with Burley. There was, at least, a tenuous familial connection. Miles son was Causeys fourth cousin.Causey would share the garage with another young man: Johnathan Bubba Turner.WHEN TURNER was maybe 7 or 8, he was decent at basketball but not particularly aggressive, former teammate Cameron Bryant says.He was the laid-back goofball. He was just chill, Bryant says. Then, around the time he turned 12, he started working out. He just got better.Turner, who declined to comment for this story, endured a difficult childhood. Sources say he grew up with no father around and a mother who struggled with drugs. He was charged as a juvenile with assault but completed a diversionary program to avoid prison. When he turned 18, his mother moved to Louisiana, and he was more or less on his own, shuffling between friends and relatives houses. He ended up moving in with one of his friends, Willie Hollins, and Hollins mother, Jeanee Miles.Miles was reluctant to add more members to her packed household, but had known Turner for years and liked him. Bubba is funny, lovable. Even though through his circumstances, you would never know what he went through, Miles says. He was always happy with everything. He was just a big, lovable giant.The neighborhood, called Highland Hills, is made up of houses with sparse, sun-scorched yards and bars on the windows. Charlene West, who lives next door, also got to know Turner and Causey. Those are good boys, West says. Id be hanging my Christmas lights and theyd be like, Oh, no, Miss Charlene, well get that for you, because they all so tall.Simpson says she never actually saw the inside of the house but would get updates on her son from Miles. I just, I dont know, shed always meet me outside, Simpson says. People can think what they want, Simpson says, but the arrangement was working. Troys grades were improving, and he and Turner became so close she says she heard Troy end calls to him by saying, I love you, bro.For both boys, things were going even better on the court: Turners high school team, Madison, won the 3A state championship that season. As a senior, he made the all-district team, leading his squad in rebounds and ranking second in scoring. Causey, a senior at Wilmer-Hutchins, was named his districts newcomer of the year. It looked like he might graduate and attend Seminole State College in Oklahoma, where his mother played.THEN CAME the evening of March 23, 2014. Turner and Causey were inside Jeanee Miles house playing video games with Hollins and another friend, Richard Williams. Williams said later that they had smoked a little marijuana. Simpson says she believes that jealousy had been brewing between her son and Turner over attention from recruiters. Turner later said Causey had been upset all day, although he didnt know why. Everyone agrees, though, that after one game, the boys had an argument over giving up the controller. They began to argue and moved outside to the driveway.Next door, Charlene Wests 21-year-old son, Frederick Weaver, was arriving home from a trip to Wichita, Kansas, with his girlfriend. He made one run inside, and as he came back out to get another bag, he saw the boys next door walking down the driveway. Troy and Bubba were about to fight, Hollins told him.Weaver later told police that Turner was trying to calm Causey down when the two squared off. Causey had a peculiar stance, holding both forearms together in front of his face, effectively blocking his own vision, according to Weaver. Causey and Turner each swung a few times, then Turner connected with a right hand to Causeys jaw. Troy went down. The crack, as witnesses described it, was sickening.Charlene West soon was outside herself, surveying the situation. She later would refuse to explain why, but she immediately helped concoct a story for the boys: Troy had gone out to the car to get a charger for his phone and was jumped. West would say she came outside and saw three boys running off.Jeanee Miles -- who says that she didnt know at the time that the story was made up -- called 911 at 9:04 p.m. One of my boys had a fight, and hes bleeding out of his ear, she said.The operator asked whom the fight was with.Im not so sure, she said. And hes, hes in and out of consciousness.Was the fight in the house?No, no, Miles said. They were outside, he was outside walking around, and my neighbor just came in and told me.An ambulance came and took Causey to Baylor University Medical Center.After the 911 call, Miles called Simpson.[She said] Troy had been in a terrible fight, he was unconscious, but hes OK now, Simpson says. I asked her what happened, and she said four boys jumped on him. Four boys jumped on him and we didnt get to see who it was, it was dark, and we dont know who it was. And I asked her, Where was Bubba and Willie? She said they were at their girlfriends house.At the hospital, Causey was in intensive care, the bleeding in his head out of control, his brain swelling and pressing against his skull. His face was puffy, his eyes slightly open and glazed.At one point, Simpson says, he started to breathe more heavily and his hands clenched. I turned to the nurse, I said, Nurse, hes waking up! Hes waking up! Hes coming out of it, hes coming out of it! And I got excited, she says. And then minutes passed, and I turned to the nurse, I said, Nurse, why isnt he up? Because he was just moving. And she just put her head down and she just shook her head. I said, Please, tell me something. Whats going on? And she said, Out of all the cases weve had, weve never seen anyone recover from this.The rest of the night, as Simpson and her husband sat there, Troys condition only worsened. Simpson says Turner and Hollins came to his bedside. Turner was silent, but Hollins swore they would find out who did it.The next day, at 1:35 p.m., Causey was declared brain-dead. ABOUT SIX hours later, Dallas homicide detective Esteban Montenegro began to process the scene. The blood spatter was what got his attention: a spray more than 5 feet from the spot where Causey landed.Something must have happened while Causey was on the ground to cause the blood to spray like that, hed say repeatedly over the course of the investigation. His focus became finding out what.In the medical examiners investigative notes, one line reads, Det. Montenegro would like to be contacted once the autopsy has begun. He would like to know about the possible high velocity impact and if the [deceaseds] injuries would be from an object or hand contact.Montenegro began by asking people whether they knew who would want to jump Causey. Someone said there had been an issue with a girl at school, and Montenegro spent time trying to run down that lead.But his attention shifted the next day, on the afternoon of March 25, when Turner and Hollins came to see him, accompanied by an attorney. Each took a turn speaking to the detective. Outside the Lines obtained video of interviews conducted at police headquarters as well as audio files of interviews Montenegro did in the field and at his office. (A police representative said the department would not permit Montenegro or any other official to speak to ESPN.)Sitting in a barren, bland homicide interview room, Turner conceded to Montenegro that he had fought with his friend. He said he punched Causey, causing him to hit his head on the ground and then seize up. They took him inside, then called 911. That was it.Montenegro heard the story and asked, Did you strike him while he was on the ground?No, sir, Turner said.At no point did you strike him when he was on the ground?No, sir.Did you kick him when he was on the ground?No, sir. Thats my brother. We be together like every day. We trying to make it happen, like, together.Hollins offered a nearly identical story when he spoke to Montenegro, though the detective clearly wasnt buying it. When Montenegro left the room, Hollins attorney asked him, Youre sure the fight was just between them two?Positive, Hollins replied.OK, the lawyer said, because if it wasnt, theyre going to find out.When Montenegro met later with Tammy Simpson, he told her that he suspected something happened to her son while he was on the ground. The blood spatter was too much, he said, and the stories from Turner and Hollins were so similar that they sounded rehearsed.Simpson, numb from shock and grief, exhausted from lack of sleep, absorbed the news. She thought about Miles phone call saying Troy had been jumped. About Hollins bedside pledge to find whoever was responsible.I didnt know what to think, Simpson says.Montenegro said there was a way to get clarity.He said the autopsy would speak for Troy, she says. THE NEXT DAY, March 26, medical examiner Elizabeth Ventura performed the autopsy on Causey. Her findings would be crucial: If Causeys death were ruled to have been caused by just his fall, Texas mutual combat laws likely would have prevented the most serious charges against Turner, according to a source familiar with the states penal code. Its possible he wouldnt be charged at all. If Ventura found evidence of further assault, though, Turner could face murder charges.Venturas initial findings, which are part of the hospital record obtained by Outside the Lines, were filed that morning at 9:30. In her report, she wrote that Causey suffered massive trauma to the back of the head, including a linear fracture of the left temporal bone -- a long crack that ran horizontally behind his ear, displaced by about 2 millimeters. He also had a cut on his lip and in his mouth, the result of a hard punch. A few hours later, she went to police headquarters to share the results.In an audio recording of their conversation, Ventura told Montenegro and another detective that there wasnt much damage on the outside -- no abrasions on the scalp -- but massive damage to the inside of the skull. She showed them fresh pictures from the autopsy. It looked to her like Causey landed on the right side of his skull, where there was another small fracture, but that couldnt explain the significant damage on the left side.Montenegro asked her whether that damage could have come from hitting the ground.No, Ventura said. Causey was hit with something, she told him, something more than a fist.Could that be caused by a kick? Montenegro asked.A very hard kick, she said. In her written report just hours earlier, shed described the fracture as linear, meaning a crack running along the skull, but now Ventura described it differently, as depressed, meaning the bone had been pushed in by blunt force. I mean, anything that ... enough to crack his skull that bad. Its a little depressed fracture, so getting hit with something would cause that.FREDERICK WEAVER, the neighbor who was returning from a trip when the fight occurred, walked into homicide room 3 the next day, March 27, and sat across a gray metal table from Montenegro. He described the scene, telling the detective that Turner tried to de-escalate the argument. Im hearing Bubba say, I really dont want to fight. You just mad. Youre just upset today, Troy.Weaver, who was friendly with the boys, said things had been tough for Causey lately. There had been rumors about all the places he might play college basketball, but the truth, Weaver told the detective, was that Causey was struggling badly in school.Turner didnt really even land a punch, Weaver said. If anything, he hit TTroy in the forearm and Troy fell back, his arms stiff, striking his head on the street.dddddddddddd And that was it.He said Turner and Hollins were in shock, looking to him for what to do next. As West came outside to see what the noise was, Weaver said he told them to get water and tried to lift Troy himself, but his 6-5 frame was too big. The three moved him, and Weaver said he didnt feel any blood on the back of Troys head. It took awhile to figure out that the blood on the street was coming from Troys left ear.When hes on the ground -- and I want you to think hard -- did anybody else hit him? Montenegro asked.Before Montenegro finished the question, Weaver started answering, emphasizing each syllable. No-body. These are brothers, dude. ... No one else hit him. It was a one-on-one fight.Montenegro started to tell Weaver that sometimes, in an effort to help someone, a witness can hurt that person. Weaver replied, I feel like youre trying to incriminate other people when its not necessary.Montenegro told Weaver that the autopsy found something else. Weaver said whatever it was, it couldnt be something that showed Causey was beaten after he fell.For eight minutes they argued.No one else hit him, Weaver repeated. They were trying to help him. Thats what I said.Let me show you something, Montenegro said. And Ill be right back. OK?Montenegro left the room and, a minute later, returned with two brightly colored 8x10 photos of Causeys skull with the skin peeled back. The images revealed a long, jagged crack that started horizontally above the left ear, dropped in a Z shape, and then ran straight across the back of his skull. Montenegro placed the photos on the table.Montenegro: You tell me Frederick. Did he deserve that? Did he deserve that? Weaver: [Calmly] Sir, thats not necessary. Montenegro: [Louder] Did he deserve that? Weaver: No, he did not. Montenegro: Thats not from hitting the ground, Frederick. Weaver: Sir, no one hit him after he hit the ground. Montenegro: That is not from hitting the ground! If you can live with this? If you can live with this ... Weaver: [Voice breaking] Im looking at this, and this is very f---ed up that you came in here and put this in front of my face. Montenegro: [Yelling] If you can live with this, thats fine ... Thats on you! You know what Im saying. If you can live with this, thats on him. [sic] Weaver: [Shouting] No one hit that kid, man! Montenegro: So that crack ... theyre lying? Weaver: No one hit that kid! Montenegro: [Yelling] So this crack is lying? Weaver: [Standing, almost wailing] No one hit that kid after he was down! Montenegro: So how do you think that happened? Weaver: [Screaming] No one hit that kid after he was f---ing down, dude!They continued screaming at each other. Weaver rose as he continued to scream, borderline hysterical.But Montenegro seemed to think Weavers hysterics were an act. Theres no tears, he said.THE INTERVIEW with the other witness, Richard Williams, one of the friends who had been in the house when the argument began, went similarly, save for the emotional outbursts. In his notes, Montenegro wrote, Mr. Williamss demeanor made me think that he knew what actually happened and his eyes began getting watery and at some point he almost cried.Only one witness would say something different.A few weeks into the investigation, a parent at school overheard Turners friend and teammate, Cameron Bryant, talking with another student about how Turner had told them that, after he punched Causey, Hollins had kicked him while he was on the ground. Montenegro brought Bryant in on May 1.After opening with flattery about Bryants basketball skills, Montenegro offered a warning: Your talent is your talent. Right? The only one who can take that away is you, by f---ing up or making a bad choice. Youre going to have to make a big, big, big, big choice today.Bryant started to tell Montenegro that one day, in sixth or seventh period, Turner told him what really happened. He then relayed the same version the witnesses told ... but Montenegro interrupted him.Thats not what happened, he said.Bryant started to tell that version again and, again, Montenegro cut him off.Somebody struck Troy. And I know for a fact you know.Bryant started again. He never told me that part. But like I say, I told Troy, like a long time ago, early, like early before basketball season, I told Troy ...Again he was cut off.Thats not what I heard, the detective said. Cameron, thats not what I heard. ... If you lie to me, youre going to hurt yourself.Finally, Bryant told a different story. He got up to demonstrate. He said Troy dipped, and then Bryant acted out punching him with his right hand. Bryants description of the punch correlated with the massive bruise on the left side of Troys lower lip. After Troy fell, he said, again acting it out, Turner started to kick him. And then he was like, Willie came up, and then Willie was coming up kicking him.Did he say where they kicked him?No, Bryant said. But knowing Willie and Bubba, they had to kick him up in the head.When they were through, Montenegro shook Bryants hand, clasping his left hand on top and holding it there for 52 seconds as he spoke. Cameron, thank you very much, Montenegro said. Youre doing this for your own good. ON MAY 5, four days after Bryants interview and six weeks after the fight, Turner was picked up at home and brought to the station. He was told he was being charged with first-degree murder. The testimony of Bryant, whose name was kept anonymous, figured prominently in Montenegros arrest-warrant affidavit. It quoted him as saying that Turner kicked the complainant in the head, even though Bryant had told Montenegro he was only guessing where Causey had been kicked. But between that testimony, the autopsy report and the blood spatter, Montenegro had probable cause.Dressed in a dark blue hoodie, Turner was led into a police interrogation room.What happened when he hit the ground? Montenegro asked him.That was it, Turner says. We took him in the house.Nobody hit him on the ground?No, sir.So that fracture on his skull, Montenegro said, it happened because ...He hit the ground hard.Turner had a question: Sir, he said, do you really think Im lying?Yes, sir.Thats what it was, sir, Turner said. I promise. Like, for real. Thats really what happened.Youre telling me that whatever the doctor found on his skull, she does not know what she is talking about? Montenegro said. Because thats not what happened. The physical evidence. The physical evidence on the ground does not, does not match with your story. Thats what I want you to understand.God got us, Turner said. He knows the truth.Well, I wish God was here so I can ask him.Just pray to him, Turner said. Hell answer your call.THE PROSECUTION in the case faced a mixed bag. Assistant District Attorney Jason Hermus had physical evidence in the autopsy and Turners confession to at least punching Causey. What he didnt have was an eyewitness who would say Causey was kicked on the ground. Then there were other problems: The blood spatter that caused Montenegro to suspect that Causey had been kicked? The states expert from the Texas Rangers reviewed the scene and disagreed with the detective. He said, according to a source, that the spatter was not high-velocity and was simply a trail left when Causey was moved.That left only Cameron Bryant, who told Montenegro that Turner confessed. But then Bryant disappeared. Investigators staked out his house, but they couldnt find him. When anyone reached him on the phone, he hung up. Authorities suspected his family was trying to help him hide.Without Bryants testimony, there was not enough to implicate Turner for murder and no evidence to implicate Willie Hollins for anything. And so, as police continued to seek a witness, Hermus began negotiations with Turners attorney, Kobby Warren.In July 2015, they reached a plea agreement. Turner was charged with manslaughter and got a seven-year suspended sentence. He would spend no more time in jail, but he would have a homicide conviction on his record. If he were to violate the terms, he could serve the entire seven years.At his sentencing hearing, Turner told the judge that he accepted his sentence. In an unsteady, searching voice, he then turned to face Simpson and her husband: I apologize for the loss, and, we was like brothers, and I never meant for it to go down like that, and -- Im sorry for the loss, and I never meant for it to go down like that.You know, Roferrel Simpson shouted from the gallery, thats something you should have said when I was at the hospital at his bedside.Simpson kept on talking as the judge told him to be quiet and threatened to throw him out.During Tammy Simpsons victim impact statement, she looked directly at Turner, through a flood of tears. Im not going to pray for you and I do wish this pain on you, she said. I just do. Thats the truth. Because it is not fair, and Im not going to conceal my hurt and my anger.Im angry. Im mad. I have every right to be. You took my baby. And I dont ever want you to be at peace for what you did.Turner sat at the defense table, his head down. His lawyer patted him on the shoulder.AS THE CASE played out, it captivated Dallas, sparking a widespread high school basketball recruiting scandal that eventually cost 15 district employees their jobs, including the one who uncovered Turner and Causeys living arrangement. Causeys coach, Burley, faced termination but was allowed to resign. The way the two boys had been thrown together to live in a garage seemed endemic of a culture that prioritized high school sports success above all else.But to Tammy Simpson, the recruiting scandal was hardly the point. It made no sense to her that a crime as egregious as her sons death could end in just a manslaughter charge, and with no prison time at that. So she dedicated her life to finding justice for Troy, organizing a rally for him and attending Black Lives Matter protests.One night at a town hall, she confronted Dallas County District Attorney Susan Hawk, who was elected after Turners guilty plea, demanding that she take up the case again. Why, she asked, didnt they prosecute Willie Hollins? Why didnt they go after Jeanee Miles or Charlene West for covering up what happened?As Hawk kept telling her that she couldnt discuss an individual case, Simpson shot back that Hawk had promised in her campaign to take on tough cases. I feel used and victimized by the Dallas Countys DA office, Simpson said.THE LACK OF justice is bad enough, Simpson says. But one of the toughest things for her has been that Turner gets to play basketball. He went to Ranger College, about two hours west of Dallas, where he is coached by Billy Gillispie, the former Kentucky and Texas Tech coach. How is it, she wonders, if the results of her sons autopsy were so clear, that Turner can be free?There were, in fact, several other outstanding questions about the case: How to square the results of the autopsy with the testimony of all of the eyewitnesses, who claimed Causey was not struck on the ground? And why did Ventura, the medical examiner, describe Causeys injury in her initial report as a linear fracture to his skull only to, hours later, when talking to Montenegro, change her characterization of it to a depressed fracture, implying a blunt-force impact? In the final written version of the report, filed later, the word linear had also been changed to depressed.Seeking greater clarity on what exactly happened to Causey, Outside the Lines requested access from Simpson to her sons medical records. Outside the Lines then asked eight independent forensic pathologists to examine the files, which included the doctors report, CT scans, the radiology report and initial autopsy. What they found raised serious questions about the entire case. All but one said they believed that the Dallas medical examiners report, signed by Ventura and the other 10 pathologists on staff, was wrong. In their view, there was no evidence of a kick.The eight experts produced four theories on exactly what happened to Causey. (Welcome to forensic pathology, one of them said.) But they almost unanimously agreed on this: Whatever injuries Causey suffered occurred before or as a result of his fall, not after.When Outside the Lines informed the Dallas district attorneys office of the experts findings in April, the prosecutors decided to have the case independently reviewed by a pathologist agreed upon by Turners attorney. The choice was Nizam Peerwani, the medical examiner in the next county. He reviewed all the same materials as Outside the Lines experts but also had access to autopsy photos, the release of which had been tightly restricted. Peerwani said he was in complete agreement with the original findings of his Dallas County neighbors. His decision seemed to deal a serious -- likely final -- blow to any hopes Turner had of clearing his record.Ventura declined to comment, as did her boss, Chief Medical Examiner Jeffrey Barnard, except for one email referencing the sealed autopsy photos: The photos which your experts did not see clearly show the findings which are in the final report, he wrote. He did not respond to additional emails asking for an explanation.In early July, Outside the Lines was finally able to obtain the photos and sent them to four of the pathologists. One said he couldnt tell what happened. The other three remained firm that they saw no evidence of a kick.There is one injury; he fell and hit his head, says Elizabeth Laposata, who was the chief medical examiner for the state of Rhode Island for 13 years and teaches pathology at Browns and Boston Universitys medical schools. There is no other possibility. Another veteran pathologist, speaking on the condition of anonymity, says, Theres no depressed fracture there. Its a little displaced, but thats from brain swelling. Its not depressed. To me, its one injury.At a minimum, the disagreement shows that multiple experts can look at the same evidence and reach different conclusions. Tough to make a homicide case on that, the veteran pathologist says.THERE WOULD BE another problem with the case: When tracked down by Outside the Lines at his house in November, Cameron Bryant recanted his testimony. He explained how Montenegro had pressured him, then said that Turner had not confessed anything to him. Thats it, he said.In early July, Assistant DA Jason Hermus agreed to sit down on camera with Outside the Lines to discuss the case. But just before the interview was to begin, when asked about Bryants shifting story, Hermus said the information was new to him. Bryant had vanished when his office was preparing its case against Turner, and Hermus said he had never heard that Bryant recanted to anyone. He said that, by law, he was now required to call off the interview. If I know a witness recanted, he said, I have to reopen this case. I cant talk about an ongoing case.A full year after Turner agreed to plead guilty to manslaughter -- and 2 1/2 years since Troy Causeys death -- the case is once again open while prosecutors seek a sworn statement from Bryant and decide how to proceed. Hermus would not comment, but the manslaughter charge against Turner could be dropped.TAMMY SIMPSON SAYS that the new developments shocked her but that her opinion of what happened remains unchanged. Well, I cried a lot, she says. She spoke to Montenegro after questions were raised about the medical examiners report and says he held firm on what happened: Theres no way Causey wasnt assaulted after he hit the ground.It doesnt matter what the experts say, or even that the district attorney has reopened the case, Simpson says. Its devastating to hear, but none of it changes how she feels.My son was murdered, she says.She says she holds the same anger she felt when she protested Turners game in December. I wanted to go kick his head in, she says. I wanted to do to him what he did to Troy.In the meantime, Turner wants to keep playing and going to school, and maybe get a scholarship to a four-year college. If he does, he may well see Tammy Simpson again, courtside and holding a sign, refusing to let him forget.T.J. QuinnQuinn is a staff writer for ESPN. Follow him on Twitter at @TJQuinnESPN.Simon BaumgartBaumgart is a feature producer for ESPN. Follow him on Twitter at @simonpb17.join the conversation follow @ESPNfollow @ESPN ' ' '

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