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Lions' Terrion Arnold arrested; charges carry possible life in prison

Florida police plan to charge Detroit Lions cornerback Terrion Arnold on multiple felony charges following his rest on Wednesday, June 24, hours after two defendants agreed to plea deals in a kidnapping and assault case they are alleged to have committed on Arnold’s behalf.

Arnold previously denied any involvement in the case.

When reached for comment, the Lions issued the following statement: “We are aware of the legal situation regarding Terrion Arnold. We will not comment at this time out of respect for the ongoing legal process.”

Detroit Lions CB Terrion Arnold stretches during practice at the Lions training facility in Allen Park, Thursday, Aug. 14 2025

Boakai Hilton, who Arnold described as “my childhood best friend” in a police video obtained by the Free Press in April, is accused of orchestrating the robbery and beating of Arnold’s personal driver and two of the driver’s associates after Arnold accused the driver of arranging the theft of more than $250,000 in cash and goods from an Airbnb he was renting in February.

The state attorney’s office, in a release Wednesday night, accused Arnold of orchestrating “the kidnapping and robbery just hours after reporting the missing items to the Largo Police Department.” The charges for Arnold carry a potential sentence of up to life in prison. The office intends to file a pretrial motion to keep Arnold in jail until trial, arguing “he remains a danger to the community,” per the release. A date for that hearing has not been set.

Hilton is charged with three counts of felony robbery, three counts of felony kidnapping and one felony count each of conspiracy to commit robbery and conspiracy to commit kidnapping. He faces life in prison.

Three other defendants – Lyndell Hudson, Christion Williams and Freddie Hughes – also face life sentences on similar charges, while two defendants in the case – Arianna Del Valle and Jasmine Randazzo – agreed to plea deals in court Wednesday.

Randazzo was sentenced to four years in Florida State prison, followed by six years of probation and agreed to testify truthfully for the state in any future proceedings related to this case. Del Valle took an open plea and agreed to testify truthfully for the state, but will be sentenced after other proceedings in the case are done.

Hilton, Hudson, Williams and Hughes are being held without bond in a Florida jail, awaiting trials scheduled for later this year.

According to records obtained from the Largo (Fla.) Police Department investigating the robbery of Arnold’s missing cash and goods, Arnold discovered watches, jewelry, designer bags and shoes, a cell phone and an estimated $100,000 in cash were stolen when he went to leave his rental unit the morning of Feb. 1.

He reported the theft two days later, on the night of Feb. 3, and Del Valle and Randazzo lured the driver and two of his friends to an apartment shortly after midnight Feb. 4, where the men were pistol-whipped, held at gunpoint and interrogated about their role in Arnold’s missing property by others in the group.

Detroit Lions cornerback Terrion Arnold (6) tackles Chicago Bears wide receiver Rome Odunze (15) during the second half at Ford Field in Detroit on Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025.

In a follow-up interview with Largo police in the days after the beatings, Arnold referenced he heard of “something that had ended up happening with [the driver and his friends] and some girls or something like that.”

He told police he was in San Francisco for the Super Bowl at the time of the incident, though body cam footage shows Arnold’s second interview with police to report the incident ended at 11:20 p.m. on Feb. 3 and Arnold’s name was mentioned multiple times in text messages Del Valle and Randazzo allegedly sent while coordinating the revenge beating.

Hilton, Hughes and a third man not linked to the revenge crime – who Arnold identified as his photographer and whose name now appears on a prosecution witness list – also reported having goods worth more than $10,000 total, including two handguns, stolen from the rental unit.

The Lions stood behind Arnold while the case hovered over his head this spring, with Lions coach Dan Campbell saying in March, “it seems like he wasn’t involved with this.”

“Until something happens, I feel like we’re going to be good here,” Campbell said March 30. “I’m going to trust what the kid said and we’re all right.”

Lions CB depth chart

Arnold practiced sparingly with the Lions this spring as he recovered from December shoulder surgery, but was present throughout practices open to the media.

He worked with the second-team defense at times during the Lions’ jog-through periods, and Campbell said before the final practice of mandatory minicamp June 17 that Arnold would have to earn his starting job back once healthy.

Rock Ya-Sin took most of the first-team reps opposite starter D.J. Reed in Arnold’s absence this spring. Third-year cornerback Ennis Rakestraw Jr. also will compete for the No. 2 cornerback job this summer, though the Lions are otherwise thin at cornerback with Roger McCreary expected to handle some slot duties and rookie Keith Abney and special-teams ace Khalil Dorsey among others vying for backup jobs.

Asked declined comment on the case after minicamp. Asked at the time if he has made any changes to his inner circle, he said he had not.

“Like I mean, I’m a home guy, hang around my family and stuff like that but a far as things like that, I just feel like kind of when certain things happen in life it’s best to remain silent,” he said. “And I mean you speak on stuff that you want to speak on it, but at the end of the day, silence sometimes is the best answer like I said before. That’s how I treat it.”

Dave Birkett covers the Lions for the Detroit Free Press. Contact him at dbirkett@freepress.com. Follow him on BlueskyX and Instagram at @davebirkett.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Lions’ Terrion Arnold arrested; charges carry possible life in prison

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