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Police Investigating Pro Athlete's Death as a Road Rage Homicide

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Professional boxer Danny Kelly Jr. was killed in a senseless act of violence on Christmas Eve. While the motive is still unclear, police said they may have an idea as to why the fatal shooting occurred.

According to Fox News, Kelly was traveling with his girlfriend and three children to a Christmas event in Maryland at the time of his death.

A driver pulled up next to Kelly’s car, opened fire and killed him, Prince George’s County police said.

When officers responded to the call, they found Kelly unconscious in the driver’s seat of his car. He was transferred to a local hospital and later pronounced dead.

Detectives said they were investigating the event as a “possible road rage incident,” Fox News reported.

“This is an absolutely heartbreaking loss for Mr. Kelly’s family and friends,” said acting Maj. David Blazer of the Prince George’s County Police Department’s Major Crimes Division.

“He is not home with his loved ones today on Christmas who are now mourning his loss instead of celebrating the holiday,” Blazer said.

Police said on Twitter they were offering a $25,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and indictment of Kelly’s killer.

Kelly, 30, was a native of Clinton, Maryland, who made a name for himself in the state’s boxing scene. He boasted a 10-3-1 professional record, WUSA-TV reported.

Of his 10 wins, nine came by way of knockout. His grandmother, Bernadine Walker, said she remembered his decisive style of fighting.

“We traveled all over the place watching him boxing, only for him to knock his opponent out in thirty seconds,” she told WUSA.

“He just had that trigger in him. He had that drive to be a good boxer.”

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Those who knew him said that Kelly was an even better person than he was a boxer. Even his first boxing coach, Daryl Brown, said their connection went far beyond the sport.

“In spite of the boxing — outside of boxing — I loved him,” Brown said. “Outside of it … if he were to stop right now and say I don’t want to do this anymore, he still would have been my guy.”

Even amid the excitement of his blooming boxing career, Kelly never forgot his family.

“The children loved him because he was playful,” Walker told WUSA. “We loved him because he was always there for all of us.”

While Kelly cannot physically be with his family any longer, he will undoubtedly live on in the hearts of all who knew and loved him.

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Grant is a graduate of Virginia Tech with a bachelor’s degree in journalism. He has five years of writing experience with various outlets and enjoys covering politics and sports.
Grant is a graduate of Virginia Tech with a bachelor's degree in journalism. He has five years of writing experience with various outlets and enjoys covering politics and sports.




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