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Ex-Giants great Taylor pleads guilty to misdemeanor charges

NEW CITY, N.Y. -- Lawrence Taylor, a Pro Football Hall of Famer, pleaded guilty Thursday to sexual misconduct and patronizing a prostitute, misdemeanor charges that carry no jail time but require him to register as a sex offender.

The 51-year-old ex-linebacker, who led the New York Giants to Super Bowl titles in 1987 and 1991, will serve six years' probation.

"She told me she was 19," Taylor, standing with his hands clasped behind him, said in court as he admitted having sex with a prostitute who turned out to be a Bronx runaway. Taylor said he now knows the girl was 16 and legally incapable of consent.

Taylor said he paid the girl $300.

Harry Carson, a former teammate and fellow Hall of Famer, was in the courtroom and gave Taylor a supportive handshake when he arrived.

Prosecutor Patricia Gunning said the plea deal was acceptable in part because Taylor had assisted in investigations into human trafficking since he was charged. Another prosecutor, Arthur Ferraro, said outside court that Taylor "was of assistance in the field of human trafficking in several jurisdictions and with federal authorities."

Defense attorney Arthur Aidala said that "obviously" included a federal case against the man charged with being the 16-year-old's pimp.

Aidala said Taylor decided the plea bargain was in everyone's best interest.

"He could have taken a much more aggressive road, but he decided it was in the best interest of he and his family and the young woman to put this behind him," Aidala said, adding he was "cautiously optimistic" that he would have won the case had it gone to trial.

"Mr. Taylor's not proud of what happened," Aidala said. "He patronized a prostitute, and that prostitute happened to be under the age of 17."

Taylor had resisted a plea deal for months after pleading not guilty to third-degree rape, patronizing a prostitute, sexual abuse and endangering a child.

Prosecutors said in December that Taylor had been offered a six-month jail term and 10 years' probation in exchange for pleading guilty to a felony. Aidala had called that offer unacceptable but said he would listen to any other offers.

Two other members of the Giants' 1991 Super Bowl team are behind bars. Mark Ingram Sr., a star wide receiver, is spending nearly 10 years in federal prison for money laundering, bank fraud and bail jumping. And Dave Meggett, an electrifying kick returner, was sentenced last year to 30 years for criminal sexual conduct and burglary.

Taylor's trial likely would have started within a few weeks.

Taylor was arrested May 6 after the underage girl's uncle contacted New York police. Officers from Ramapo woke Taylor at a Holiday Inn in Montebello.

Police said Taylor was cooperative and no drugs were found in the room, although a bottle of alcohol was. Taylor has a history of drug offenses, but he has been to rehab, and his lawyer said the former linebacker has been sober for years.

"The whole L.T. persona, to me that's an act," Carson said before court. "I'm here for Lawrence Taylor. I'm not here for L.T. ... Once he went through some of the stuff he went through, he realized that was a hindrance to himself and his family."

In court, Carson, sitting in the front row of the gallery, reached over a low wall into the defendant's area and straightened Taylor's overcoat collar.

In a related case, federal prosecutors in Manhattan filed a complaint last year against a man who is accused of acting as the girl's pimp. Court papers in that case say Taylor admitted to sex acts with the girl but said he was told the girl was 19.

Ramapo police Chief Peter Brower said after Taylor's arrest that ignorance of a minor's age isn't a defense to third-degree rape.

Aidala had claimed that Taylor's arrest was illegal because police didn't have a warrant when they burst into his suburban hotel room in May. Prosecutors said no warrant was required, and state Supreme Court Justice William Kelly rejected the claim. But he granted a pretrial hearing on whether or not statements Taylor made upon his arrest were admissible. Aidala said in December he was relishing the chance to cross-examine the arresting police officers.

Taylor was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1999. A fierce, athletic linebacker, he redefined his position and was selected to the NFL's 75th Anniversary All-Time Team.

In 2009, Taylor competed in ABC's "Dancing With the Stars." He also had been a spokesman for the NutriSystem weight-loss company, but he was dropped after his arrest.

Sentencing is March 22. That same day, state Supreme Court Justice William Kelly will determine what level of sex offender status Taylor will have. Aidala said he will suggest Level 1, which he said would mean checking in once a year with local police.

Aidala said he would seek to have Taylor's probation transferred to Florida, where the former player now lives.

Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press

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