A Nashville jury has convicted former Tennessee Titans scout and Arkansas State defensive back Blaise Taylor in the 2023 death of his pregnant girlfriend, Jade Benning, and their unborn child.
Taylor, 30, was found guilty Wednesday on one count of second-degree murder, one count of first-degree murder and two counts of first-degree felony murder. After deliberating for just over two hours, the jury unanimously imposed a life sentence. He will have to serve at least 51 years before he can be considered for parole.
Prosecutors said Taylor intentionally poisoned Benning on Feb. 25, 2023, by putting a fatal dose of cocaine in her drink. Benning was five months pregnant at the time, and prosecutors argued Taylor did not want her to carry the baby to term because she refused to have an abortion.
Benning died of acute cocaine poisoning on March 6, her 25th birthday. The unborn fetus died two days after the poisoning, on Feb.
- Benning was unable to speak with investigators before she died.
Her friend Nijaiha Deshay Jackson testified that Benning called her the night she was poisoned and said Taylor had put something in her drink.
“‘I knew my drink tasted funny. I know you put something in my drink because I can’t even walk,’” Jackson recalled Benning saying. “She said, ‘You did this so something could happen to the baby.’”
Taylor had pleaded not guilty. After the verdict, his attorney Joshua Brand urged the jury to consider a lesser outcome.
“You don’t have to give him life without the possibility of parole,” Brand said. “… You can give him the opportunity to try for rehabilitation.
You can give him the opportunity to work hard in prison. He’s not going anywhere.”
Brand was not available for comment.
Taylor’s football background included a run at Arkansas State from 2014 through 2017, where he was a team captain and first-team All-Sun Belt defender. He later worked in the Titans’ scouting department until 2023, then left for Utah State as a senior defensive analyst. After one year there, he took a defensive analyst job at Texas A&M, but was arrested less than a week after that hiring was first reported.
In Other News...
One Offensive Problem Still Stands Between Saints And The NFC South
Ben Solak of ESPN sees a path for the Saints to climb back to the top of the NFC South in 2026, and the logic is easy enough to follow. The division has been shaky, New Orleans was competitive at the end of the 2025 season, and there is real optimism around Tyler Shough entering his second year with a better supporting cast around him.
The lingering question is whether the offense can do enough to make that projection matter. The Saints have spent the offseason trying to sharpen the attack, but the run game remains the part that could decide whether this team turns a hopeful forecast into a division title chase or settles for another year of what-ifs. [Read more 🡒]
Steve Gleasons Message To Chris Johnson Will Hit Saints Fans Hard
Chris Johnsons ALS revelation landed with a familiar and painful force for Saints fans, because the league has long known the disease through Steve Gleasons battle. Johnson shared his diagnosis in a recent interview, and the news immediately brought Gleason back into the conversation, not as a football figure this time but as someone who has lived the same cruel reality since 2011. For New Orleans, Gleason has become more than a symbol of resilience, and his response carried the kind of weight only this community can fully appreciate.
Gleason has used his platform to back Johnson publicly while also pointing to the work of his foundation for people living with ALS, a reminder that the fight goes well beyond one player or one team. His message was rooted in solidarity and hope, the kind of support that matters when a former star is still trying to absorb how far the disease has advanced. For Saints fans, it is another hard reminder of how ALS keeps testing people who once seemed larger than the game itself. [Read more 🡒]
Easton Kilty Faces A Defining Saints Camp Battle Up Front
Easton Kilty is back in New Orleans and trying to make the leap from developmental project to real roster candidate as he enters his second NFL season. The undrafted offensive tackle spent most of his rookie year on the practice squad after signing with the Saints in 2025, then returned on a reserve/futures deal that kept him in the mix heading into camp.
Now the battle gets more complicated, because Kilty is trying to carve out a place on an offensive line the Saints spent the offseason trying to strengthen. He brings a solid college rsum from North Dakota and Kansas State, but camp is where that background has to turn into proof, and for Kilty the next few weeks will go a long way toward showing whether he can stick when the competition tightens. [Read more 🡒]
