Update On Wrestling Journalist's Claim Of Randy Orton's Alleged Suicide Attempt
Wrestling journalist Irv Muchnick has posted up a follow-up report regarding Randy Orton’s alleged suicide attempt. Muchnick is quiet certain that the story is true, but was mistaken in the time frame of the alleged suicide attempt in his last report. Muchnick says that the incident occurred sometime in the spring of 2006, shortly after he was suspended by WWE for “unprofessional conduct.” Muchnick compared notes of this alleged incident with another journalist who has ‘unimpeachable credentials’ and they both came up with the name of the St. Louis area hospital where Orton was said to have been taken to. Muchnick believes that Orton was depressed and overdosed on drugs at the time.
Below is the post from his website with more information regarding this situation:
Orton: Further Notes
Brian Stull invited me onto his “Stranglehold” show Tuesday night on KFNS radio in St. Louis to discuss the blog report on Randy Orton’s rumored suicide attempt.
Off the air, Stull had spoken with Cowboy Bob Orton, Randy’s father. Bob Orton told Stull the report was false. Bob Orton also said he had spoken with his son, and Randy said he had no idea where this rumor started.
I have little doubt that the story is substantially true, though the time frame of my original blog item (http://muchnick.net/babylon/2007/09/18/did-randy-orton-attempt-suicide/) was mistaken. The Randy Orton incident, whatever it was, occurred in the spring of 2006, shortly after he was suspended by World Wrestling Entertainment for “unprofessional conduct,” and a few months before he was suspended a second time, in August of last year, for failing a drug test.
I compared notes on this with another journalist, who not only has unimpeachable credentials but also had looked into the same story last year on the basis of a tip from a completely different direction. Independently, we each had the name of the St. Louis area hospital where Orton was said to have been taken (and, no, it’s not some generic name like “St. Louis Hospital”).
Likeliest explanation: Randy was depressed and OD’d on something.
The Orton camp’s contention that there is neither smoke nor fire here is, sadly, not the case. Indeed, WWE’s vice president of talent relations (now senior vice president) John Laurinaitis was concerned enough about the rumor last year to investigate it himself. Laurinaitis talked to Randy and others, and concluded that there had not been a suicide attempt. I would say that such a finding is hardly dispositive, given the company’s nonexistent reservoir of credibility these days.
Like his many fans, I hope Randy Orton will be OK. If he is relying solely or largely on the WWE wellness policy to regulate his drug use and mental hygiene, however, I am not confident on that score.
Suicide attempt or not — and I stand by the report that there was one in the spring of 2006 — WWE needs to explain why Randy Orton was not suspended for 60 days upon exposure of his role in the recent Signature Pharmacy dragnet. The explanation that Orton’s August 2006 suspension already covered this wellness policy violation does not wash, since the evidence shows that he continued to receive Signature shipments as late as February 2007.
Are these questions impertinent three months after the Chris Benoit horror?
Or would a fair-minded observer agree that they are newly urgent?
Irvin Muchnick
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