NEW ORLEANS — Lawyers for the man who shot former Saints star Will Smith were set to continue building a self-defence case Saturday, the sixth day of his second-degree murder trial.
Attorneys for Cardell Hayes, 29, say he shot Smith in fear because the retired NFL player was angry, intoxicated and going for a gun after their cars collided in New Orleans.
Prosecutors rested their case Friday after nearly a week of hearing from witnesses, including Smith’s widow, Racquel, who was hit in the legs by gunfire that night.
She and Smith’s former teammate Pierre Thomas were among prosecution witnesses who said Smith’s anger seemed to have cooled before the gunfire. But Hayes’ passenger in the Hummer insisted that Smith and others with him were the aggressors.
On Friday, friends of Hayes described him as being in a joking mood when he showed up at his regular barber shop the day of the shooting. "Always smiling," friend Dwight Harris said.
It’s unclear whether Hayes might testify.
Defence attorneys John Fuller and Jay Daniels have maintained that police were quick to jump to conclusions when they arrested Hayes, who co-operated with police and did not leave the scene.
Among the issues at trial is whether Hayes intentionally rammed his Hummer into Smith’s SUV. A prosecution expert said Friday it looks as though he did.
Video from businesses on New Orleans’ Magazine Street shows Smith’s SUV stopping short — perhaps lightly hitting — an orange Hummer driven by Hayes. Moments later and a few blocks away, Hayes’ Hummer rear-ended Smith’s SUV. The defence says that was an accident.
Hayes got out carrying a handgun, but Smith was unarmed. The defence claims Smith was going for the loaded gun in his SUV when Hayes fatally shot him.