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No Note, No Firm Clues So Far In Junior Seau's Death

Junior Seau in 2002, when he was with the San Diego Chargers.
Stephen Dunn
/
Getty Images
Junior Seau in 2002, when he was with the San Diego Chargers.

While the signs so far point to suicide, there aren't yet any really revealing clues to why former NFL star Junior Seau apparently killed himself Wednesday.

About all there is so far is a hint that, in retrospect, Seau may have said some goodbyes. The San Diego Union-Tribune reports that:

"His ex-wife, Gina Seau, of Fairbanks Ranch, said that on Tuesday he texted her and each of their three children separate messages: 'I love you.' "

Police say they did not find a note from the 43-year-old Seau, who it appears shot himself in the chest Wednesday morning at his beachside home near San Diego.

According to our colleagues at KPBS, "an autopsy could shed more light on the death — an examination which may be completed as early as Thursday, the county Medical Examiner's Office said."

There is, as noted Wednesday, already speculation about whether Seau may have been suffering from depression. He killed himself the same way that former Chicago Bear Dave Duerson took his life last year.

Duerson asked that his brain be studied for signs of chronic traumatic encephalopathy. As NPR's Tom Goldman said on Morning Edition, a subsequent study revealed that Duerson did indeed have brain disease — something that many older and retired football players fear because of the repeated blows to the head they suffer over their careers.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Mark Memmott is NPR's supervising senior editor for Standards & Practices. In that role, he's a resource for NPR's journalists – helping them raise the right questions as they do their work and uphold the organization's standards.

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