Kyren Lacy’s Death Just Got [Exposed]
COVER-UP CAUGHT ON CAMERA: Troopers ‘Forge’ Statements to Frame LSU Star Kyron Lacy in Fatal Crash—The Truth They Tried to Bury is Finally Out
The layers of lies surrounding the tragic crash that killed veteran Herman Hall are finally peeling back, and what they reveal is a sickening pattern of police coercion, racial targeting, and institutional betrayal at the highest levels of the Louisiana State Police (LSP). This wasn’t a reckless driving case; it was a clear-cut frame-up, executed by a state trooper and aided by a civilian who knew the truth.
The official narrative—that former LSU player Kyron Lacy caused the fatal accident after passing four cars—has been exposed as a complete fabrication. The evidence, including a stunning moment of a trooper actively coaching a witness, proves that officials weren’t seeking justice; they were looking for a high-profile scapegoat.
The Moment the Lie Crumbles
The most explosive evidence comes from the investigative report and body camera footage, which directly contradicts everything the public was told. The “truth” painted a picture of Lacy immediately causing the wreck, but the facts are damningly different:
The Distance: At the moment of impact, the report confirms Lacy was yards behind the collision. He had been back in his lane for a staggering yards before the crash occurred. He was nowhere near the scene of the impact.
The Cover-Up Call: Body camera footage captures State Trooper Tyler Warner—who was the same age as Lacy (24)—actively trying to coerce a witness (the driver of the “gold truck”) into lying.
Trooper Warner’s Suggestion: He tells the witness, “Just, uh, make sure you add in there that, uh, you had to slam on your brakes and the brakes locked up to avoid that charger.” (Lacy was driving a Charger).
The Witness’s Truth: The “gold truck” driver immediately contradicts the trooper, stating clearly that the wreck was caused by “that lady in the back of me” who “didn’t know what’s happening.” He further confirms he wasn’t going fast and left “no skid marked or nothing.”
Despite this on-camera testimony, the written statement that followed—prepared while the trooper’s body cam was mysteriously turned off—miraculously changed to include the lie: the witness claimed he “slammed on the brakes and emergency brakes to avoid the crash.” This is the definition of a forged statement, an attempt to pin the blame on an innocent man.
The True Culprit and the Cop Who Hated
The evidence now points to Briana Emani Gray as the person who actually caused the crash that took Herman Hall’s life. Instead of taking responsibility, she allegedly lied in her statement, painting the picture that Lacy was responsible.
But the blame for the subsequent destruction of Lacy’s life falls squarely on State Trooper Tyler Warner.
The motive? Pure, ugly jealousy and racism.
Lacy was an LSU star going to the NFL; Warner was a low-level trooper “hiding behind the trees waiting on drunk drivers.” The transcript suggests a deep-seated resentment: “Your jealousy, your hatred, your racism is the reason why Ky Lacy is dead.” The irony is brutal: Warner’s wife was reportedly “at LSU games every Saturday cheering for Kyron Lacy” while Warner was actively working to destroy him.
This was not a mistake; it was a malicious, targeted campaign to frame an easy target—a Black football star—for a crime committed by others.
A Coordinated Attack: Media, NFL, and LSU Join the Fray
The corruption didn’t stop with the police. Once the LSP decided on their narrative, a whole system moved to crucify Lacy before he was ever proven guilty.
The Money Grab: Despite having the video footage for nearly a year, officials waited to charge Lacy with negligent homicide, a hit-and-run, and reckless operation, forcing him to pay a staggering $151,000 bond for an accident he didn’t cause.
Media Malice: News outlets immediately released “wanted images” and his mug shot to “make it seem like he’s already guilty.” They even used footage of his touchdown celebrations, specifically highlighting him “pointing guns,” to manipulate public opinion and paint him as a dangerous criminal.
The NFL and LSU Betrayal: Even the organizations that should have stood by him turned their backs. The NFL told Lacy not to attend the Combine based on mere “word of mouth,” and LSU followed the typical pattern of throwing a Black player “to the wolves” the moment he was in trouble, acting like “he never played for y’all team.”
This entire system—from the street-level trooper to the highest offices of the police, media, and collegiate sports—was mobilized to ruin Kyron Lacy’s life, cost him his future, and humiliate him for a crime he simply did not commit.
The tragic case of Kyron Lacy, much like the infamous police killing of Ronald Green where troopers lied about him dying in a crash, exposes a “clear pattern of targeting and falsely accusing black men” in Louisiana. The only question left is: Will Trooper Tyler Warner, Briana Emani Gray, and the officials who tried to bury this truth finally face the consequences?