NFL

Ex-NFL player, accused of urinating on plane passenger, issues statement

Gosder Cherilus, once a Boston College standout football player who spent eight years in the NFL, was arraigned in East Boston District Court and issued an apology where he cited sleeping medication for "behavior that is not representative of my character"

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A former NFL player and Boston College alum was arrested on an overnight flight from Boston Logan International Airport for allegedly urinating on another passenger.

The Delta flight, which was headed to Dublin, returned to Boston following a report of an unruly passenger, according to Massachusetts State Police.

Police identified the passenger as 40-year-old Gosder Cherilus, of Wakefield, Massachusetts.

After the plane landed, Cherilus was irate and uncooperative when asked to leave the plane, police said. Cherilus was charged with disorderly conduct and disturbing a flight crew.

Court documents obtained Monday said that Cherilus "appeared intoxicated prior to the flight." He apparently was in a bad mood as a result of his seating arrangement, and became disruptive, irritable, delirious and aggressive. About 40 minutes into the flight, he allegedly walked over to an elderly woman and urinated.

The "egregious behavior" shocked everyone on the flight, the court documents said, putting them in fear of their safety and forcing the pilot to divert the flight back to Boston.

A former NFL player and Boston College alum is facing a judge Monday morning on shocking allegations. Gosder Cherilus was arrested at Logan airport over the weekend.

"Delta has zero tolerance for unlawful behavior and will cooperate with law enforcement to that end," a Delta Air Lines spokesperson told NBC10 Boston in a statement Monday.

The former Boston College standout football player spent eight years in the NFL with the Indianapolis Colts and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers after being drafted by the Detroit Lions in the first round of the 2008 draft.

Cherilus pleaded not guilty at his arraignment Monday in East Boston District Court and is scheduled to return to court in October. It was not immediately clear if he had an attorney.

He opted not to take questions after the hearing, but he released a statement on social media, in which he said he took "sleeping medication that I don't normally use, which resulted in behavior that is not representative of my character," and apologized to the passengers and crew of the flight.

Read his full statement here:

"I'd like to address the media reports about me that surfaced today regarding a situation that occurred onboard a flight to Ireland this past weekend. The flight was unexpectedly delayed for approximately four hours, and it did not take off until after 12:30AM. In preparation for the unexpected overnight flight, I took a sleeping medication that I don't normally use, which resulted in behavior that is not representative of my character, and I would like to apologize to the passengers and flight crew."

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