Court filing: Jackson feared Pearce 'will kill me'

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    Michael Rothstein

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      Michael Rothstein, based in Atlanta, is a reporter on ESPN's investigative and enterprise team. You can follow him via Twitter @MikeRothstein.
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  • Marc Raimondi

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    Marc Raimondi

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      Marc Raimondi's first year covering the Falcons was 2024, but it wasn't his first year at ESPN. He joined the company in 2019 and was a top combat sports reporter. He also covered professional wrestling and wrote the book "Say Hello to the Bad Guys: How Pro Wrestling's New World Order Changed America," which was published by Simon & Schuster in 2025. Raimondi also worked for the New York Post and Newsday, beginning in 2009, covering high school and college sports, plus the NFL, NFL, MLB and NHL.

Mar 11, 2026, 05:11 PM ET

WNBA player Rickea Jackson filed a petition for protection against her ex-boyfriend, Atlanta Falcons edge rusher James Pearce Jr., saying that she was "in fear of my life" and that if the court didn't intervene she believed "James will kill me," according to court documents obtained by ESPN.

Jackson, who plays for the Los Angeles Sparks, filed the petition for injunction for protection against dating violence in the days following Pearce's arrest on battery and stalking charges, after he allegedly rammed his car into hers Feb. 7. Jackson separately filed notice with the court that she is willing to testify in proceedings against Pearce.

The court granted her initial request for protection, and a permanent injunction hearing is set for April 21. Pearce is under order not to have contact with Jackson or come within 500 feet of her home or place of employment or 100 feet from her vehicle.

Jackson wrote that Pearce "verbally and physically abused me on more than one occasion" and threatened to kill, harm and injure her and to place a bag over her head, according to the court filing.

Jackson also detailed the Feb. 7 incident that led to Pearce's arrest, saying that she saw Pearce following her in his vehicle as she drove home and that she called 911 and instead drove to a Doral, Florida, police station "because I knew James was going to hurt me." She said Pearce chased after her at high speeds and blocked her with his car at a traffic light, trying to enter her car and jumping on top of the vehicle.

She said he then reentered his vehicle and chased her car, striking her car multiple times to get her to spin out. She said he cut her off with his vehicle and eventually spun out himself. She said Pearce ran her off the road before she reached the Doral police station. Upon reaching the station, she flagged down an officer as Pearce rammed her car with his. It is then she says the officer attempted to arrest Pearce, who fled the scene. The initial incident report stated that police pulled a gun on Pearce and he did not obey their commands, instead getting back into his car.

Pearce then allegedly struck a police officer with his car, according to the initial incident report, before he crashed his vehicle and fled on foot, where he was eventually arrested by officers.

Pearce, 22, faces five felony charges -- two counts of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon, one count of aggravated stalking, fleeing and eluding police officers, and aggravated battery of a law enforcement officer. He also faces nine traffic citations and a misdemeanor count of resisting an officer without violence to his person.

Jackson, 24, wrote in the petition that she became more afraid for her safety after trying to break up with Pearce weeks before his arrest. She also said Pearce told her he would give her "up to $75,000" to visit with him and "$200,000 to remain in a relationship with him" in the hours leading up to the Feb. 7 incident.

The Falcons declined comment to ESPN. Jackson's attorneys and Pearce's attorney and agent did not immediately return messages left by ESPN.

Jackson said that Pearce believed she was cheating on him and that tensions escalated during a confrontation in January. She wrote in the petition that Pearce took her cellphone, pulled her hair and snatched her belongings and that she did not want to be in a relationship with him following the confrontation. She said, "James did not listen to my request and instead went on a campaign of threats, physical assaults and abuse against me."

The description of the encounter is similar to that of one that occurred in an Uber, according to a Jan. 28 police report filed in Davie, Florida, and obtained by ESPN .

Davie police spoke with Jackson in person and then by phone with Pearce, who said there was not a physical altercation. He admitted to thinking Jackson was cheating and explained that she offered to let him search both her phones. An Uber driver who was present during at least part of the incident told police he only observed a verbal argument, not a physical one, and police did not see any bruising or injury to Jackson, determining there was no evidence of a crime due to the conflicting statements and lack of physical injury.

Police in Florida responded to at least seven other 911 calls made involving Pearce and an ex-girlfriend whose name was redacted from police reports from November until the day of Pearce's arrest.

Jackson said in the petition that Pearce had been harassing her through text messages, demanded she stay in a relationship with him and "consistently banged on my front door numerous times." She also said he slept in his car outside her home waiting for her to leave and stood in front of her home when told to leave.

A police report Jan. 13 said authorities told Pearce not to return to his ex-girlfriend's home.

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