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’Bama booster’s home was bloody mess

Young’s fatal wound was spread throughout house, creating eerie scene

Booster's house
Police tape surrounds the home of University of Alabama booster Logan Young, who was found dead Tuesday.
Greg Campbell / AP
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updated 7:25 p.m. ET April 14, 2006

MEMPHIS, Tenn. - The home of Alabama booster Logan Young was so splattered with blood that police thought they were looking at multiple crime scenes.

Young was dead and police quickly launched a homicide investigation.

But as it turned out, they now say, there was no crime at all and Young, who drew national attention last year because of a football recruiting scandal, was dead from an accidental fall and a gushing head wound.

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Fatally hurt, the 65-year-old millionaire apparently stumbled in a daze through at least a half dozen rooms spreading blood throughout his spacious, two-story house before a final collapse on a bedroom floor.

Such head wounds can leave sufferers so confused they don’t realize how seriously they’re hurt, said Shelly Timmons, chief neurosurgeon at the Regional Medical Center at Memphis.

“They’ll be walking and talking and moving about, but their brains are not functioning properly,” Timmons said Friday. “They may not know what to do about the bleeding or to even call for help because they’re too confused.”

Police Lt. Joe Scott said it took a while for investigators to realize that the blood spread through Young’s stone Tudor residence where he lived alone may have all been his. Initially, they thought it came from at least two people.

Investigators identified what they thought were four separate crime scenes — particularly bloody areas where violence had occurred. But eventually, Scott said, they began to “notice a pattern development in each of the four scenes and that was a lack of any struggle.”

No blood was splattered on the walls or ceiling as would be expected where someone had been swinging a club, knife or other weapon.

“We started to put the whole picture in perspective,” Scott said.

Young had a single, large gash on his head, which matched up with the bloody end of an iron railing post on stairs leading to his bedroom. There were no signs of a break-in and no valuables reported missing.

Police believe Young died late Monday night or early Tuesday morning after falling on the stairs and hitting his head on the railing. At a news conference Thursday, they displayed drawings depicting what they believe was the bloody trail he left through the house.

Young apparently tried to stop the bleeding with towels from the kitchen and a bathroom before finally making his way upstairs to his bedroom.

The medical examiner also issued a preliminary report listing the cause of death as a head injury suffered in a fall, and the chief state prosecutor in Memphis agreed, too.

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Scott said the investigation will remain open until police get back lab results from forensic tests such as DNA scans on blood samples collected at the residence.

Toxicology tests to show whether drugs or alcohol played a part in the death are expected to take up to two months.

Young was convicted last year on money laundering and conspiracy charges for paying a high school coach to send a top recruit from Memphis to Alabama.

Trial evidence showed Young to be a heavy drinker, but defense attorney James Neal said Young had cut back on consuming alcohol.

Young was sentenced to six months in prison but was free pending appeal. He had a kidney transplant following the trial and was on a health improvement program.

“He said he was feeling good but was having a hard time getting his energy back,” Neal said.

On appeal, Young had argued that the offense he was charged with — bribing a high school football coach -— was not a federal crime.

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