Quadruple amputee cornhole player arrested for alleged murder, Maryland police say | US news

A sheriff’s office in Maryland has alleged a professional cornhole player, who is also a quadruple amputee, fatally shot a passenger in a car he was driving during an argument.
Dayton James Webber, 27, was arrested and charged as a fugitive from justice by police in Albemarle county, Virginia, the Charles county sheriff’s office said in a statement.
Charles county is seeking Webber’s extradition from Virginia and said he will be charged with first-degree murder, second-degree murder and related charges.
Webber didn’t immediately return a message seeking comment sent to an email address listed for him.
In a 2023 essay for the Today show, Webber said doctors had amputated his arms and legs when he was 10 months old to save his life after he contracted a serious blood infection. His medical team gave him a 3% chance of surviving, he wrote.
Webber went on to become a professional player of cornhole, a game in which players throw bean bags though a hole in a slanted wooden board to score points.
Webber pulled over after the shooting in La Plata, Maryland, and asked two passengers in the back of the car to help pull the victim out, the Charles county sheriff’s office said. The witnesses refused, got out of the car and flagged down police officers.
Webber fled with the victim still in the car, the sheriff’s office said. Two hours later, a resident in Charlotte Hall, about a 10-mile (16km) drive away, reported a body in a yard. The victim, Bradrick Michael Wells, 27, of Waldorf, was pronounced dead by officers at the scene.
The American Cornhole League posted a statement on its Facebook page saying it was aware of allegations involving Webber but said it would not comment on what it called “an active legal situation” while proceedings were ongoing.




