Body cam footage from the December 10 arrest of former Michigan Wolverines head football coach Sherrone Moore has surfaced, showing a man in visible distress on the same day he lost his job, sitting in handcuffs in the back of a police cruiser and struggling to process what had happened.
The footage, obtained by TMZ Sports, captures Moore parked in a church parking lot in Michigan while wearing Wolverines gear when officers first approached his black SUV. As police instructed him to keep his hands visible and exit the vehicle, Moore was openly weeping and told officers that a shoulder injury made being placed in handcuffs painful.
What the footage shows
Once seated in the police cruiser, Moore told responding officers he had just been let go from the University of Michigan. When an officer offered his condolences, Moore responded with resignation, suggesting the end had been coming. When asked about his emotional state, he referenced a therapist and made clear he had no intention of harming himself, pointing to his family as his reason to stay grounded. Officers told him they were there to help.
During a search of his person, Moore voluntarily disclosed that a pair of scissors was inside his vehicle.
What led to the arrest
Moore had been dismissed from Michigan after the university learned of an inappropriate relationship with a team staffer. Following his firing, he went to the residence of Paige Shiver, the staffer involved, and confronted her at her home. Officials said the encounter became alarming when Moore picked up butter knives and a pair of scissors and made statements suggesting he might hurt himself.
His wife, Kelli Moore, called 911 to report that her husband had threatened to take his own life. Police responded to the scene and the body cam footage released this week reflects what followed, offering a difficult look at a man in the middle of a personal and professional collapse happening simultaneously.
Where the legal case stands
Moore originally faced three charges stemming from the incident, including felony home invasion, stalking and breaking and entering. Earlier this month he reached a legal agreement and entered a no contest plea to two misdemeanor counts, malicious use of an electronic communication device in the context of a domestic relationship and trespassing.
His sentencing is scheduled for April 14.
Shiver is no longer employed by the University of Michigan. Her legal team has indicated that a civil lawsuit against both Moore and the university remains a possibility.
The body cam footage now enters the public record weeks before that sentencing date, adding a visual dimension to a story that had largely been told through court documents and official statements. What it shows is a man whose professional collapse and personal crisis arrived at the same hour, in a church parking lot, with officers standing outside a black SUV waiting for him to step out.
Source: TMZ.com

