Quarterback sneak makes pass at women

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Jill King Greenwood is a Pittsburgh Tribune-Review staff writer and can be reached at 412-321-2160 or via e-mail.
He's no Brian St. Pierre either.
The Brentwood man is accused of impersonating both Steelers quarterbacks in the past year in attempts to woo two women who bought his story -- at least for a while. They watched him sign footballs and jerseys, and pose for photographs with children and other fans.
Jackson, 31, who was convicted of homicide by vehicle in the 1996 death of a Brookline man, was arraigned Friday on harassment and criminal mischief charges in the masquerade and ordered to undergo an evaluation at a behavioral clinic, according to the Allegheny County District Attorney's Office.
Jackson met Julie Valo, 26, in the South Side in September and introduced himself as St. Pierre, according to an affidavit of probable cause. He dated Valo for a few weeks and told her to watch a Steelers game in which he would be playing. When Valo tuned in, she realized she'd been had.
Jackson "called her after the game, and she confronted him about not being St. Pierre," the affidavit states. Jackson then told her "that she was crazy and that he looks different when he is on television."
Valo told Jackson to leave her alone, but he continued to call and follow her from work, according to the affidavit. Jackson then threatened the woman in an attempt to dissuade her from pressing charges.
Valo contacted Steelers security in October, and Jackson called Valo on her cell phone while she was meeting with team officials, the affidavit states. One official got on the phone, and the man on the other end acknowledged he wasn't St. Pierre. Even though the officials were able to determine Jackson's phone number, the case went no further because Valo declined to pursue charges at the time.
Then last month, Mary Groft told authorities she was in a Brookline pizzeria when a man approached her, according to the affidavit. The man, who was not identified, said he was a friend of Roethlisberger's and that Groft was the quarterback's "type of girl."
The woman gave the man her phone number, and a few days later received a call from a different man who identified himself as Roethlisberger, the affidavit states.
The two talked several times over a few weeks, according to the affidavit, before Jackson, posing as Roethlisberger, asked Groft for a date. He came to her house and gave her an "autographed'' football. He then talked to Groft's neighbor and signed a Steelers jersey worth about $75.
When Groft returned home, the neighbor told her that her date was an impostor, the affidavit states.
Steelers security officials eventually contacted the district attorney's office and gave investigators the names of the two women.
A Steelers spokesman did not return a call for comment.
Jackson, formerly of Brookline, surrendered yesterday, and his attorney, Paul Boas, declined to comment.
On April 25, 1996, Jackson and his brother Stephen, then 17, were drag racing at speeds of up to 75 mph on Brookline Boulevard when the car driven by Stephen Jackson collided with a vehicle driven by Richard J. Smith, 45, who was killed. Stephen Jackson was found guilty as a juvenile and freed from detention after serving six months. Brian Jackson was sentenced to a year in jail.
Brian Jackson was arrested again in 1997 for driving with a fraudulently obtained license.
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