Rae Carruth’s prison release nears as son he wanted dead turns 18
BY SCOTT FOWLER
November 14, 2017 03:59 PM
Updated February 20, 2018 08:59 AM
On Nov. 16, 1999, the son of former Carolina Panther Rae Carruth was supposed to die.
Instead, Chancellor Lee Adams is about to turn 18 years old.
Chancellor Lee will reach this landmark as a gentle young man. He has lived his entire life in Charlotte protected and emboldened by a loving grandmother, Saundra Adams, who has raised him from birth.
The party she has planned for her grandson is not a traditional 18th birthday party, but Chancellor Lee Adams is not your typical 18-year-old.
He smiles more, for one thing. He also has cerebral palsy and permanent brain damage owing to the trauma of an emergency birth that deprived him of blood and oxygen.
A gunman shot his mother four times on the night of Chancellor Lee’s birth. The bullets caused the eventual death of Cherica Adams – Saundra Adams’ only biological child. Chancellor Lee seems untroubled by the dark circumstances that brought him into the world 10 weeks prematurely, however. He has known no other life other than the one that orbits around the beloved grandmother he calls “G-Mom.”
This family photo from 1999 shows Cherica Adams proudly showing off her pregnancy. Her baby Chancellor Lee Adams was born by emergency Caesarean section later that same year after Adams had been shot four times in a murder conspiracy masterminded by former Carolina Panther Rae Carruth.
Courtesy of Saundra Adams
For his party, Chancellor Lee plans to go to a pumpkin patch in the Charlotte area, accompanied by a couple of his friends from his therapeutic horse-riding class.
He will take a hayride. He will pet the animals in the petting zoo. He will eat the first piece of birthday cake, which will feature his favorite strawberry mousse filling as well as a picture of a horse.
“Chancellor will be in the starring role,” Saundra Adams says, beaming. “And he deserves that. You only get to be 18 once.”
We are sitting together in Charlotte’s Freedom Park along with Chancellor Lee. It is early November. The leaves are turning from green to gold. Chancellor Lee used his walker – pausing to carefully navigate a 2-inch divot in the asphalt – to make it to the bench where he now sits.
Saundra and Chancellor Lee look happy. It has been a good year. This is in part because the extreme generosity of strangers and friends – shepherded by an NFL assistant coach in San Francisco who once was close to Carruth – that has allowed the Adamses to buy a brand new home in Charlotte.
The day Carruth is released
Saundra Adams says she cannot believe that her grandson is 18. Having covered both Carruth’s draft day as the Carolina Panthers’ first-round pick in 1997 and his horrifying trial less than four years later, I have a hard time believing it, too. I congratulate Chancellor Lee for his upcoming birthday.
“Thank you,” he says, smiling hugely.
“The time has flown by,” Adams says. “It really feels like it was just a couple of years ago that we were bringing him home from the hospital.”
“Yeah!” Chancellor Lee agrees.
“Yeah” is his favorite word to say in a conversation, closely followed by “thank you.” Chancellor Lee generally talks in one- or two-word sentences. In most of those sentences, he either affirms what you just asked him or shows extreme politeness.
Is he looking forward to his birthday party?
“Yeah!”
And what day is his birthday?
“No-vem-ber 16th,” Chancellor Lee says, pronouncing each syllable slowly.
His father will not be there for this party, just like he has not been there for any of Chancellor Lee’s first 17 birthday parties.
Carruth remains in a North Carolina prison for his role in masterminding the conspiracy to murder Cherica Adams, his on-and-off girlfriend, in 1999. She was pregnant with Chancellor Lee at the time, and Carruth did not want to pay child support.
But it is technically possible that Carruth could attend his son’s 19th birthday party next year.
The former Panther is scheduled to be released from prison on Oct. 22, 2018.
In 1997, Rae Carruth (84) was a promising NFL rookie and Carolina’s first-round draft choice. He scored the only four NFL touchdowns of his career that season, including this 24-yard TD pass he caught from quarterback Kerry Collins (12).
File photo Charlotte Observer
Would Chancellor Lee like to meet his father on the day he is released?
“Yeah!” he says.
“He knows about it,” Saundra Adams adds. “We’ve talked about it a lot.”
And, with a little more than 11 months to go before Carruth’s expected release, that remains the Adams’ plan. They want to meet Carruth at the prison gates when he finally becomes a free man.
A visit to the jail
It is early October 2017, and Saundra and Chancellor Lee Adams are inside a jail themselves. This is not the one where Rae Carruth is incarcerated, however. Carruth is imprisoned in Clinton, N.C., 170 miles east of Charlotte.
Carruth once made roughly $40,000 per game with the Panthers. For much of his prison sentence, he has worked as a barber, cutting the hair of other inmates for a dollar a day.
Saundra and Chancellor Lee have instead come to the Mecklenburg County Jail in uptown Charlotte on this day, at the invitation of the jail’s correctional staff. They are the guest speakers in an “Anger Management” class.
Saundra Adams speaks to inmates at the Mecklenburg County Jail in October 2017 as her grandson Chancellor Lee Adams looks on. Her 30-minute talk received a standing ovation from several of the prisoners, who also had questions about how she had been able to forgive Rae Carruth and his three co-conspirators for murdering her daughter.
Scott Fowler
sfowler@charlotteobserver.com
The Adamses do have some history with this place. Carruth was held at the jail before his sentencing. He also had a brief, heavily supervised visit with his son inside this very jail when Chancellor Lee was a year old.
Saundra Adams was there that day, too. This was in 2000, before Carruth was convicted and sentenced to nearly 19 years in prison. Adams says that once Carruth realized the visit could not be photographed or filmed by the media that he wasn’t much interested anymore in seeing his son, and ended the visit after about 10 minutes.
That was the last time the father and the son laid eyes on each other.
Now, Saundra and Chancellor Lee have been invited to speak to these inmates – some of whom were in elementary school when Charlotte’s most infamous trial was being nationally televised every day. She has spoken at different prisons in both Carolinas about a half-dozen times now.
There are 25 men in front of Saundra and Chancellor Lee, all of them sitting in brown plastic chairs. Most are scheduled to be released in the next 3-6 months. They all wear orange jumpsuits much like the one Carruth wore when he was housed there.
Rae Carruth, shown here in 2003, was convicted in early 2001 of conspiring to murder Cherica Adams and has been imprisoned ever since. Carruth has not seen his son, Chancellor Lee Adams, for 17 years.
David T. Foster
dtfoster@charlotteobserver.com
Saundra Adams starts her talk by telling the men that she believes in hope and forgiveness. She says that she also believes a man should not be defined only by the worst act he has ever committed. She plans to get into the reasons she long ago forgave Carruth and her conspirators later.
She launches into her story, going back to the days in 1999 that changed her family forever.
“We normally go through life thinking, ‘That would never happen to me, because I’m a good person,’” Adams begins. “And then all of a sudden, something horrific happens. With the case of my daughter, she was dating NFL player Rae Carruth. We thought it was a good match. But after being in the relationship for awhile, it got really tumultuous.”
‘He could just flip on a dime’
“It was almost like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,” she continues, speaking of Carruth. “He could be really, really nice sometimes – and he could just flip on a dime and change up. It made her live in fear.”
Adams has told herself she will not cry while telling the story. Sometimes she does. Sometimes she doesn’t. But today she wants to be strong in front of the inmates.
She talks briefly about the case prosecutors built to explain why Carruth ordered a hitman to kill her daughter in 1999.
“I can’t speak on what actually drove Rae to conjure up such a devastating and dire plan to actually have her killed,” Adams says. “It came out basically he didn’t want to pay child support. He already had a child (a son, also named Rae, whose mother was getting several thousand dollars in child support from Carruth already). ... He had told that child’s mother: ‘Be careful when you come to Charlotte to watch me play football because something could happen to you.’ ... We learned through the process that he got someone else pregnant and got them to have an abortion. Well, Cherica would not do that. So the plan progressed – from having her pushed down the steps to lose the child – to full-blown murder.”
Cherica Adams graduated from West Charlotte High. This is a photo from the 1993 West Charlotte High yearbook.
AP
The prisoners are leaning forward. The only sound in the room is the voice of Saundra Adams, punctuated occasionally by Lee whispering, “Yeah.”
She pauses, collecting herself for the part of the story that is hardest to get through no matter how many times she tells it.