NEED TO KNOW
- Perry Tole, the victim of an assault allegedly carried out by former NFL quarterback Mark Sanchez, reportedly told his longtime friend Gregg Keesling that “faith guided his hands to protect” himself
- Tole allegedly told authorities that he stabbed Sanchez in self-defense
- Sanchez, who now works as an analyst for Fox Sports, was in town to call the Colts-Raiders game on Oct. 5, and the alleged assault occurred around midnight local time
Perry Tole, the victim of an assault allegedly perpetrated by former NFL quarterback Mark Sanchez, reportedly said that his “faith guided my hands to protect myself.”
Tole, 69, the alleged victim of Sanchez, 38, was reportedly driving a cooking oil recycling collection truck on a midnight route in Indianapolis, around 12 a.m. local time on Oct. 4. Tole says that he put his music career on hold to care for his sister-in-law, who was shot in the head during a convenience store robbery in 2011, according to local outlet Fox 59.
Tole, who is originally from Jamaica, was recently sworn in as a U.S. citizen in September.
Tole says that he was parking his truck at a loading dock in an alley between the Westin and Marriott downtown hotels when her first spotted Sanchez. The former New York Jets quarterback was in town to call the Colts-Raiders game on Oct. 5 on Fox Sports, the outlet reports.
“I’m fairly positive he has never been in a fight in his entire life,” Gregg Keesling, Tole’s longtime friend from their time in Jamaica, told the station. “He’s a very peaceful man, and in this situation, I think faith guided him, as he told me, ‘Faith guided my hands to protect myself.’ ”
Tole told police he was confronted by Sanchez regarding the location of the truck, which was located near Loughmiller’s Pub and Eatery, per Fox 59. A witness identified as B.B. told authorities that he witnessed Sanchez throw Tole to the ground, and that both men were recording one another on their cell phones.
Tole, who was allegedly thrown into a wall and on the ground, fought back with pepper spray and eventually a knife in self-defense, per the local news station.
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Both men were hospitalized to receive treatment for their wounds. On Monday, Oct. 6, Marion County Prosecutor Ryan Mears announced in a press conference that his office filed a charge against Sanchez for Level 5 felony battery, USA Today reports.
If convicted of the felony, Sanchez would face between one and six years in prison. He was initially arrested and faced three misdemeanor charges — battery with injury, unlawful entry of a motor vehicle and public intoxication, PEOPLE previously reported.
After missing last week’s game, Sanchez will not call another NFL game as an analyst this week, the outlet reports. Sanchez’s usual play-by-play partner, Adam Amin, will be working, NBC Sports reports.