WWE Scrambles After Double Murder-Suicide

WWE Scrambles After Double Murder-SuicideMr. Benoit was the W.W.E. World Heavyweight Champion in 2004. (Photo: World Wrestling Entertainment, via Associated Press)

Following a grisly murder scene created by a former champion, World Wrestling Entertainment is trying mightily to cut ties with a deed that echoes a sport that stages brawls between feuding, well-built men.

So close are the similarities that they may include the cause of death for the second victim, Chris Benoit’s seven-year-old son. ABCNews.com reported today that investigators think he “may have died after being put in a wrestling choke hold.” The wife, who once played a pro wrestling character, was strangled beforehand; Mr. Benoit hanged himself, authorities said.

Authorities found legal steroids in the home, but toxicology tests could take weeks. Either way, the W.W.E. is trying to dismiss ‘roid rage’ as a possible cause. A news release with five bullet points noted that he recently tested negative for steroids and argued the crime had none of the hallmarks of a steroid flip out.

“The physical findings announced by authorities indicate deliberation, not rage,” the company said. Adding to the portrait, the main image on WWE.com shows Mr. Benoit half smiling.

The W.W.E. said that the statement was a response to “sensationalistic reporting,” but the company is also fighting steroid accusations that have emerged from former wrestlers, and a case in the 1980s. Testimony from Hulk Hogan, among the sport’s biggest stars, said that steroid use was “fairly common” among competitors, and he himself booked orders with Chairman Vince McMahon’s secretary. Mr. McMahon was acquitted.

And steroids aren’t the only thing associated with the sport that may be to blame.

Christopher Nowinski, a former wrestler and author of “Head Games: Football’s Concussion Crisis,” told The Times that multiple blows to the head could trigger chronic traumatic encephalopathy, which can cause memory loss, depression and “bizarre, paranoid behavior.”

“He was one of the only guys who would take a chair shot to the back of the head,” Mr. Nowinski said.

The W.W.E. is also facing criticism for its initial handling of the death, which included a three-hour tribute show filled with teary remembrances of Mr. Benoit. It was taped before authorities had pinned the murders on Mr. Benoit, but long after company employees received odd text messages from Mr. Benoit stating his address and the location of dogs on his property.

Mr. McMahon, who had to admit that he indeed survived a car bombing on the show weeks ago to lead Monday’s show, admitted last night that the tribute was a mistake.

He then tried to change the subject, pledging no further “mention of Mr. Benoit tonight.” His alternative to further probing of the tragedy – and the sport – was simple.

“Tonight, the W.W.E. performers will do what they do better than anyone else in the world – entertain you.”

So the show shall go on, but whether Mr. Benoit’s final acts will prompt changes remains to be seen.

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There’s also the report that Benoit’s son suffered from Fragile X syndrome, which can be extremely stressful on affected families:

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As for the tribute show, there are lots of things to criticize WWE for, but I can’t fault them for this. Within a few hours of finding out the news, they had to scrap the planned three-hour show and put together a new one from scratch. So they chose to honor someone who was still, at that point, a very well-liked and respected colleague. In hindsight, it may not have been the wisest move, but it was an honest mistake.

A point of information — Nancy Sullivan never performed in the WWE. She performed as “Woman” in rival companies ECW and WCW, but never the WWE. This article should be updated to reflect that distinction.

Furthermore, maybe the first paragraph can be updated. It reads as if to say that WWE frequently stages familial murder scenes as part of its regularly programming. That simply isn’t true.

More likely most of these crimes will turn out to be divorce related. The potentially disasterous financial and emotional consequences for men today’s utterly anti-male, anti-father divorce courts has made “Divorce Italian Style” with a new wrinkle, killing the kiddies too, all too common.

Franklin Alden Jr. June 27, 2007 · 2:22 pm

Wrestling should not be referred to as a sport. It is a semi-improvisational drama.

I think this will be a watershed event influencing public opinion of steroid use.

I’d be very curious to know what type of testosterone levels the W.W.E. and the county toxicology report test for: free, bounded or both.
Due to a preexisting medical condition, doctors for a number of years have been prescribing me Androgel (testosterone gel) to boost my male hormone levels. Unfortunately my doctor had been using a blood test for the bounded (non active) testosterone. This level was on the low side for my age group. When I recently had a saliva test done by a nurse practioner, my free testosterone (what is used by the body) was unreadable because it was way above the normal range. Does make me wonder.

Murder suicide always entertains me.

Merci, M. Benoit!

yes it is sad you can tell that there are a lot on roids but u can also see that there are some that are not. this will now but a dent forever on this entertainment if it is true that roids were the cause the supplier should be charger with murder.

I don’t understand why everyone keeps referring to professional wrestling as a “sport” and listing the “championships” Benoit won. This isn’t a sport– it’s a scripted TV show, and the wrestlers are actors, not athletes.

This situation is undeniably sad. But that’s no reason to try to elevate a staged show to the level of a sport. It’s like claiming that Kiefer Sutherland is a real federal agent.

Mr. Benoit took the life of his son and wife, with no reason. no note was left indication of not planing the murders. the son room was a hartbreking maybe after the fact he must realize what he done and could’nt life with that. His now a murder that for ever be in the mine of the fellow performers, i feel for Chavo and Bastista to have two closed friend dying so soon and tragid
no matter what the reason was Mr. Benoit took the easy way out after the killings.

VIOLENCE always leads to VIOLENCE, plain and simple. ROIDS use is a major culprit in the cause and extent of VIOLENCE.

He was a great Wrestler at WWE!!!!!

yeah it is scripted tv, but they are athletes, or at least gymnasts.

This is not a place to bash wrestling.

Wrestling is not a sport, but Mr. Benoit is certainly an athlete. Yes, the results of each competition are predetermined, but that does not mean that significant physical effort and abilty isn’t extended in getting there.

It’s always been a question of how many deaths it would take until wrestling’s steroids and painkillers problems provoked the public outrage they deserved.

Curt Hennig wasn’t enough.
Davey Boy Smith wasn’t enough.
Louie Spicolli wasn’t enough.
Rick Rude wasn’t enough.
Brian Pillman wasn’t enough.
Eddie Guerrero wasn’t enough.
Road Warrior Hawk wasn’t enough.
Crash Holly wasn’t enough.

As USA Today reported in 2004, “Wrestlers have death rates about seven times higher than the general U.S. population, says Keith Pinckard, a medical examiner in Dallas who has followed wrestling fatalities. They are 12 times more likely to die from heart disease than other Americans 25 to 44, he adds. And USA TODAY research shows that wrestlers are about 20 times more likely to die before 45 than are pro football players, another profession that’s exceptionally hard on the body.”

I find it enervating that many media outlets are advancing the latest “roid rage” theory to justify Benoit’s decision to murder his son and wife. Did people examine Susan Smith’s levels of estrogen and determine that PMS caused her to murder her children? Did Andrea Yate’s post-partem psychosis defense sit well with most Americans? No.

Face it: blaming biology alone is a weak argument that pawns off responsibility for a parent’s or spouse’s heinous actions onto the idea that men are naturally aggressive due to testosterone; hence, the higher the level of testerone, the higher the likelihood of aggressive behavior. Or women are natural nurturers; hence, when they kill their children or spouses, they have defied Nature, God, and the norms of femininity.

Just as I don’t condone a PMS defense, I don’t endorse the “roid rage” theory as a means of explaining what to many seems inexplicable– men murdering their families– but what is in actuality a common event. How many men have murdered their families in the last four weeks in the U.S.? Are all of these men taking steroids? Is Bobby Cutts a regular steroid user? Is the father in Illinois who murdered his family in his mini-van a professional athlete who abuses enhancement drugs? I doubt it.

Maybe it’s time to re-consider what feminists have long argued: the so-called aggressivity of men, and so-called nurturance of women, are social norms supported by media and other outlets of cultural ideology, not biological determinisms that function as blanket explanations for why parents and spouses murder. Violent masculinity is seen as a social asset in some contexts, and an unavoidable biologism in others–you can’t have it both ways.

Perhaps most enervating of all is the fact that the media rarely if ever scrutinizes or demonizes white men when they kill their spouses and children; rather, it is implicitly agreed that they must have been under pressure as breadwinners and simply snapped due to the stress. Yet black men and most women who kill their children or spouses are often portrayed as failures of nature, as guilty of the worst form of ethical default possible for a human being: betraying one’s basic nature. For example, the rhetoric around Bobby Cutts is very different from what is being said about David Benoit, and doubtless this can be attributed to racist ideologies. Although the media is not necessarily the point of origin for these double standards of gender and race, media outlets are certainly guilty of endorsing and extending these problematic lines of reasoning.

I think one of the great tragedies here is that YET another wrestler has died all-too-prematurely. Whether it be suicide or (more likely) “natural causes” I can not help but to notice the number of professional wrestlers who are not making it to their fiftieth birthday. Sport or not – call it what you will – these guys are dying at a rate far beyond that of any professional sport. THAT needs to be investigated.

He was a great Wrestler and he was rough and cool!!!!!

To think thousands of young men looked up to him as a hero. To kill his own son with his own hands, he went from former champ to permanent coward in one weekend. Very sad end for him and hopefully for this so called “sport”

Professional wrestling is a sport, it has real athletes. If they were not athletes then they could not do the things they do in the ring. Just because they have storylines does not mean they do not put their bodies on the line every night they perform.

As for Chris Benoit’s tribute, i think the WWE did make a mistake for not having all the facts right away. But its a mistake that they should not be scorned for. Just because one wrestler did that, does not mean the rest of the industry is like that.

Tom,

Yes, it IS a pre-scripted show; but you like MANY others,fail to understand the absolute physical conditioning and training these athletes go through.
Yes, I said athletes,to start when they audition(admittedly for personality/acting)they also have to show they have the physical capabilities to do their jobs. “IF” they are chosen..they have to train and that training is grueling to say the least.

One of my friends lived in Colo. Wrestling nut and a big guy 6 foot 5 inches..he tried out for the WWE farm/talent/training pool..he was bruised, bumped,
and ended up with a mild(fortunately) concussion..He was,however expected to train through that…he decided the life was not for him.

Not Athletes? I would like to see one of us folk leap from a 30 foot high steel cage and land correctly onto a concrete floor. From the top rope it’s about 10 to 12 foot..bounce of the rope and fly across the ring to hit your opponent..make it look good and NOT hurt yourself,OR your opponent.

Acting? yes Entertainment? yes Athletes? YES

Over the last few years, due to some bad influence from an old friend, I took up the habit of watching wrestling entertainment. For the past few years I have hated the “television character” of Vincent McMahon… but…

I am honestly impressed with how he has handled the incendents surrounding Benoit’s death. The three hour memorial telecast was commemoration of a man who brought a lot to the wresting entertainment industry for the audiences as well as the wrestlers. Those actions were taken before they had full knowledge of the murder/suicide of the Benoit family.

McMahon’s direct and pointed response to the development of the evil actions of Benoit was very professional and demonstrated a PR response that is highly appropriate. They can’t take back the three hour commemoration, and disregarding what Chris Benoit accomplished in the past is inappropriate as well. McMahon has a harder task ahead of him in learning from the recent events and incorporating company policies and reaching out to his employees in light of this week’s tragedy.

The actors are definately athletes… Saying they are not athletes is like saying an acrobat isn’t an athlete.. Yes the TV show is scripted, but when the wrestlers/actors are athletes and actors..

The difference is that Kiefer Sutherland is not actually shooting guns and tracking down criminals… These Wrestlers are actually flying through the air, throwing eachother around and their bodies are taking punishment… Staged or not, it is still physicaly taxing to them..

If steroids were to blame, then more than half of Major Leagues baseball’s athletes and familes would be dead. Just like not all NBA players are street thugs, not all WWE performers are abusive. Sheer probablitliy dictates there will be a nut in every profession. I agree with those who say the WWE is not a sport. It’s quite obvious since their own name says “entertainment” in it. I couldn’t help but laugh when one of the so-called experts in this article referred to Chris Benoit getting hit in the head with a chair. That guy must have been hit on the head too many times as well to believe any of that is real.

I have to disagree with Tom. Although professional Wrestling is a “scripted TV show”, these wrestlers are athletes. They have to have physical stamina, flexibilty, strength, and the ability to perform dangerous stunts which can, and do cause them injury, eventually. The problem here is that they don’t have an off-season or other teammates to take their position when they become injured. If they don’t perform, they can likely lose their jobs to someone standing right behind them who is willing to step in. That is why steroid use and prescription drugs probably run rampant in Professional Wrestling circles. My feeling is that the industry needs to have some regulations in order to protect these athletes from the non-stop beatings they take in order to entertain millions of fans, and make CEOs BILLIONS!