
Tyrie Cleveland, Rick Wells Arrested: Latest Details, Mugshots on Florida WRs
Florida freshman receivers Tyrie Cleveland and Rick Wells were arrested Sunday for shooting pellet guns and "causing more than $1,000 in property damage at Keys residential housing on the UF campus," according to Edgar Thompson of the Orlando Sentinel.
The pair is being held in the Alachua County Jail and is charged with "criminal mischief for damaging property of more than $1,000—a third-degree felony—and shooting a missile inside an occupied dwelling—a second-degree felony," according to Thompson.
The police report indicated that three windows had been shattered, and video surveillance showed two men chasing and shooting at someone on Sunday evening.
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“This is not behavior that we expect, and as I often talk about, there will be consequences for their actions,” head coach Jim McElwain said in a statement on Monday, per John Taylor of College Football Talk.
McElwain later expanded on the arrests in an ESPN interview (h/t Zach Abolverdi of SEC Country):
"A lot of people go through life making choices. We all do. Everybody in this room does. And yet, here’s the beauty: we have freedom of choice. The thing we don’t have is freedom of consequence based on our actions. Our guys know they’re going to be dealt with. That’s the way we handle things, the way I handle things. I think my track record proves that. And yet, it’s not about that as much as the education of what you learned from your actions. And that’s the thing — as a teacher, as a coach — you go through every single day is trying to help all these young men learn from past historical data. And that’s where we’re at. These guys will be dealt with and it’ll be taken care of.
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Barrett Sallee of Bleacher Report tweeted each player's mugshot:
Cleveland was a 4-star recruit for the Gators and was considered the No. 2 wide receiver and No. 33 player overall in the class of 2016, per 247Sports' composite rankings. He was the school's top recruit on the offensive side of the ball and was expected to earn major playing time and make an immediate impact during his freshman year.
As Thomas Goldkamp of 247Sports wrote in June: "He's simply too explosive not to get on the field, even if he's a bit raw right away. The Gators don't have a guy on the roster with his combination of size, speed and hands."
Wells, meanwhile, was a 3-star wide receiver and was considered the No. 462 player in the class of 2016, according to 247Sports' composite rankings.



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