Fmr. NFL star catches his own friend burglarizing his house

Friday, July 24, 2015
Fresno State football
A former Fresno State football wide receiver who made it all the way to the NFL has been the victim of a burglary in Fresno. The suspect was one of the last people Bernard Berrian expected would rip him off.

FRESNO, Calif. -- A former Fresno State football wide receiver who made it all the way to the NFL has been the victim of a burglary in Fresno. The suspect was one of the last people Bernard Berrian expected would rip him off.

Berrian investigated the crime on his own before turning it over to Fresno police. The suspect was Berrian's longtime friend who he met at Fresno State where they played football together.

Surveillance cameras inside Bernard Berrian's home show exactly what the former Minnesota Vikings wide receiver saw after installing extra security at his Northeast Fresno home.

"I actually watched him doing it while he was doing it," said Berrian. "I could have actually spoke to him, I got a microphone on there. I could have told him, I got you, while he was doing it."

But instead, a shocked Berrian was speechless, watching the crime unfold, by a burglar he knew, who even brought cleaning supplies to wipe away the evidence.

"I was like, wow, he is a real professional, he takes a spray bottle with him to wipe off fingerprints and a towel."

Just a few weeks earlier, Berrian's home was broken into twice. Police were called in, but the trail never led to a suspect because no fingerprints were left behind. On April 28th, Berrian was at a barbecue and Therrian Fontenot was there too.

"It was crazy because we were all sitting around and he actually left from where we were at to go do it," said Berrian. "Boom, motion sensor went off, I get an email, so I click on the live cam."

Fontenot and Berrian go way back. They connected in college on the gridiron and ever since have remained good personal friends. Recently Berrian had noticed Fontenot had become more inquisitive.

"He would always call me and try to ask me where I was, make sure I was out of town," said Berrian. "If I was home all the time, he'd blow up other friends in the crew asking them the same question, where's Bernard, how come he's not answering his phone."

What was taken during the first burglaries made Berrian determined to catch the thief.

Berrian explained, "Oh he took about, what, $30,000 cash total."

No one was ever arrested for the initial crimes due to a lack of evidence. But Fontenot was charged with the one caught on tape. Several weeks ago, he pleaded no contest, or guilty in a Fresno County courtroom.

Public defender Tomas Kunder said, "He has accepted responsibility at an early stage of the proceedings in this case. He has shown remorse for his actions."

Berrian attended the sentencing and wrote a letter to the court describing why the circumstances made him feel so violated.

He said, "I just wanted the judge and the court to know the level of deceit that he went through."

Berrian feels the crime wasn't motivated by malice, but rather Fontenots desire to live a lifestyle he couldn't afford.

"He tried to keep up with this status that he was this big baller, playing, having a bunch of girls and had money and was traveling everywhere," said Berrian. "But he wasn't doing that on his own, it was other people that were putting him up."

During sentencing, the public defender told the court his client is working toward a better life.

Kunder said, "He is currently involved in what's called NASM Essentials of Personal Fitness Training, where he is studying to be a personal trainer any studying in sports medicine."

The judge ordered Fontenot remanded to serve the rest of his six month sentence. For Berrian, fair punishment didn't necessarily have to equal jail time. But he did feel some satisfaction watching Fontenot get handcuffed and hauled away.

Berrian explained, "I mean I hate seeing people go to jail and I hate seeing people get locked up but he got what he had coming to him."

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