Rashee Rice talking to reportersRashee Rice (Kansas City Chiefs/YouTube)

Rashee Rice has gone from being a sensational rookie in his debut campaign in the NFL to being a Super Bowl champion to being a person who is likely to be suspended multiple games due to actions off the field.

Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Rashee Rice was already in hot water following an accident where he was racing a car, but now he is a suspect in an alleged assault that injured a man at a Dallas nightclub.

His legal trouble prompted many to do some digging into his past.

Pro Football Talk dipped into their sources and found out that the former Southern Methodist University football star had some trouble while in college.

During the pre-draft process, multiple organizations became aware of an alleged incident involving Rashee Rice while he was at SMU.

At the time, Rice believed that former SMU basketball player Kendric Davis was seeing Rice’s girlfriend. According to evidence acquired by at least one team, Rice and some of his companions attended an SMU basketball game, and according to information received by at least one team, Rice (or someone with him) fired multiple bullets at Kendric Davis’s empty automobile.

Multiple sources believe that every team, including the Kansas City Chiefs, was informed of the incident prior to the selection. Kansas City selected Rice in the second round despite the issues surrounding him.

SMU never reported the incident to authorities.

Rashee Rice Facing Multiple Felony Charges 

Rashee Rice (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)

Following his involvement in a multi-car collision on a Dallas highway in March, Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Rashee Rice was charged with eight felonies, including six counts of collision involving bodily injury, one act of collision involving serious bodily injury, and one count of aggravated assault.

A $10 million lawsuit was brought by two crash victims against Rice and SMU cornerback Theodore Knox, who was purportedly operating the second vehicle that resulted in the collision.