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The Mike Danton case main
Mike Danton's hockey career
Profile: Mike Danton
Profile: David Frost
Profile: Quinte Four
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the fifth estate: Rogue Agent

THE BUZZ
top quoteI do not believe in over 18 years on the bench I have been faced with a case as bizarre as this one.top quote U.S. District Judge William Stiehl at Danton's sentencing.

More quotes

RECENT STORIES
  • Ex-NHL agent David Frost arrested
    David Frost, the former agent of jailed NHL player Mike Danton, has been arrested by Ontario Provincial Police for sexual exploitation and assault, CBC has learned.
  • David Frost resigns as NHL player agent
    David Frost, the controversial agent of imprisoned former NHL hockey player Mike Danton, has resigned as a player agent.
  • Danton's father not sorry about arrest
    Steve Jefferson, the father of imprisoned former NHL player Mike Danton, is unapologetic over confronting Danton's agent, David Frost.
  • CBC uncovers further Danton-Frost intrigue
    A documentary produced by CBC-TV's the fifth estate offers recordings of former NHL player Mike Danton's jailhouse conversations and interviews with his parents and agent David Frost.
  • Junior hockey league bans David Frost
    Frost is no longer welcome in Central Junior A Hockey League arenas.
  • Danton receives 7 1/2-year prison term
    Danton is sentenced for a murder-for-hire plot that stunned the hockey world.
  • Danton's sentencing date pushed back
    Danton's sentencing date is delayed until November, according to the office of the judge hearing the case.
  • Wolfmeyer found not guilty in murder-for-hire plot
    Katie Wolfmeyer is acquitted of charges she helped Danton hire a hit man in a failed plot to murder Frost, his agent.
  • Wolfmeyer pleads ignorance in murder-for-hire plot
    Katie Wolfmeyer testifys at her conspiracy trial that she knew nothing about Danton's plan to murder his agent or anyone else.
  • Danton pleads guilty in murder-for-hire case
    Danton pleads guilty to a murder-for-hire conspiracy charge.
  • Danton's lawyers want location of trial moved
    Danton's lawyers move to have the former Blues forward tried outside St. Louis.
  • Mike Danton to remain in jail
    A federal judge denys bail for Danton and orders him to remain in jail until the trial.
  • Prosecutor slams Mike Danton
    A U.S. federal prosecutor argues Danton was "too cowardly" to kill his agent himself.
  • Contact between Danton and Frost barred
    "Your best friends now are your attorneys," says U.S. District Judge Michael Reagan.
  • Danton issues statement denouncing family
    Danton claims he was emotionally and physically abused during his childhood by his parents.
  • Danton plotted for months to kill agent: prosecutors
    Danton plotted to kill his agent on three separate occasions over six months.
  • Danton's agent denies he is alleged target
    Frost says Danton was deluded and depressed, but wasn't trying to kill him.

  • INDEPTH: THE MIKE DANTON CASE Mike Danton's hockey career
  • On Sept. 20, Katie Wolfmeyer was acquitted of charges she helped Dantion hire a hitman in a failed plot to kill his agent.

  • On July 15, Mike Danton pleaded pleaded guilty to a murder-for-hire conspiracy charge in a U.S. court. The former St. Louis Blues forward faces seven to 10 years in prison when he is sentenced on Oct. 22.

  • Mike Danton, a centre with the St. Louis Blues, was arrested in San Jose, Calif., on April 16, 2004 just hours after the team was ousted by the Sharks in Round 1 of the Stanley Cup playoffs. A criminal complaint filed in a federal court in Illinois stated that Danton and a woman, 19-year-old Katie Wolfmeyer, allegedly attempted to hire a man to kill a male acquaintance.

  • A 23-year-old win-at-all-cost scrapper, Danton played all five playoff games, scoring a goal in Game 4, a 4-3 loss on April 13.

  • Danton struggled to regain his spot in the Blues' lineup late in the regular season after missing eight games with a shoulder injury. Unlike in the past, he kept his mouth shut and continued to work hard, a sign that Danton's career and life seemingly had turned the corner.

  • Danton cracked the Blues' lineup out of training camp, replacing fellow pest Tyson Nash, and posted 12 points in a career-high 68 games in 2003-04.

  • The Blues gave Danton a fresh start, acquiring the physical forward in a trade with the New Jersey Devils on June 21, 2003.

  • Danton scored twice in 17 games with New Jersey during 2002-03 season.

  • Danton was suspended by the Devils in December 2002 when he refused a demotion to the team's American Hockey League affiliate in Albany. A month later, he served the Devils with legal papers, seeking to gain his release from the team. Danton sat at home while New Jersey won the 2003 Stanley Cup.

  • Known to some hockey fans as the guy who uttered, "I'm not drinking Lou's Kool-Aid." The comment was in reference to Devils' general manager Lou Lamoriello, who refused to pay the medical bills when Danton sought advice on a reported abdominal tear.

  • Legally changed his last name to Danton from Jefferson on July 25, 2002, because he wanted to distance himself from a bad relationship with his family, including his father Steve. Chose the name Danton because it was the first name of a boy at a summer hockey camp, and it sounded cool.

  • Suspended for the first time during the 2001-02 season by New Jersey for refusing to report to the Albany River Rats of the American Hockey League.

  • Danton won an Ontario Hockey League championship with the Barrie Colts in 1999-2000.

  • Drafted 135th overall by New Jersey after scoring 87 points in his final year of junior hockey with Barrie.

  • Danton amassed 179 points in 141 games over three Ontario Hockey League seasons with Sarnia, Toronto and Barrie.

  • At the 2000 Memorial Cup, Danton slammed Rimouski Oceanic star centre Brad Richards, suggesting the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League player wouldn't last five games in the Ontario league. Richards is now one of the Tampa Bay Lightning's best forwards. He finished tied for ninth in NHL scoring this season with 79 points.

  • Part of an eight-player Ontario Hockey League trade on Jan. 11, 1999. Dealt to Barrie from the Toronto St. Michael's Majors along with Ryan Barnes, Sheldon Keefe and Shawn Cation. Majors management reportedly didn't approve of the influence agent David Frost had over the players.

  • Described by former junior teammates as quiet, somewhat anti-social when it came to off-ice outings. Reportedly refused to participate in team functions.

  • Led all Ontario Hockey League players with 107 penalty minutes during 2000 playoffs.

  • Drafted by the Ontario Hockey League's Sarnia Sting as a 16-year-old after collecting 28 points in 35 games for the Quinte Hawks of the Metro Toronto Junior Hockey League. Danton became associated with controversial agent David Frost, who at the time was an assistant coach with Quinte. Frost has been suspended indefinitely by the Ontario Hockey Association and the Metro Toronto Hockey League for incidents on and off the ice.

  • Formed the Quinte Four along with Ryan Barnes, Sheldon Keefe and Shawn Cation.

  • Danton won a bantam all-Ontario championship playing for the Toronto Young Nationals of the Metro Toronto hockey league.

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