New York Giants fullback Nikita Whitlock?said burglars scrawled racist graffiti that included a swastika, the letters KKK and the phrase Go back to Africa when they broke into his New Jersey home on Tuesday night.Whitlock told?WCBS-TV in New York on Wednesday that jewelry and video-game systems were taken, and that it was the second break-in at his familys apartment since late November.The Moonachie Police Department is investigating Tuesdays incident.It just re-establishes that no matter where you are, no matter who you are, this can happen to you, said Whitlock, who is serving a 10-game suspension for violating the NFL policy on performance-enhancing substances.Whitlock, 25, told WCBS-TV that he and his wife and their two young children were out for a few hours when the most recent burglary took place. Whitlock said the intruders gained access through a small window of their Bergen County residence.Its very disgusting, actually. Its very disheartening, Whitlocks wife, Ashley, said. You hear about things like this that do happen, but you never think, Oh, this is going to happen to me.Its about to be 2017, Nikita Whitlock said. Oppression, racism, hatred, violence, theres no need for that.A representative for Whitlock told ESPNs Josina Anderson that the players previous residence was also burglarized.Sgt. Richard Behrens told ESPN that the first incident at Whitlocks current residence, which occurred over the Thanksgiving holiday, was an act of vandalism in which a door window was broken.Whitlocks 10-game ban was for the same substance that cost him four games in 2014, according to an ESPN source. The second suspension will cost him $204,705 in salary.Whitlock, a second-year player out of Wake Forest, was already on season-ending injured reserve with a foot injury.Whitlock was the Giants fullback and a key special-teams contributor last season. He also played some as a pass-rushing defensive tackle. Whitlock started five games, had a sack and finished with four special-teams tackles.Information from ESPNs?Jordan Raanan was used in this report. Air Jordan 4 Retro For Sale .Y. - Nelson Mandela will be honoured by the New York Yankees with a plaque in Monument Park. Cheap Jordan 4 For Sale . U.S. District Judge Lorna G. Schofield in Manhattan agreed that lawyers on both sides could make their formal requests by Nov. 8. A hearing is scheduled for a day earlier. Jordan Siev, a lawyer for Rodriguez, wrote in a joint letter to the judge from lawyers on both sides that MLB lawyers planned to ask that the lawsuit be dismissed. http://www.cheapairjordan4.net/ . -- Ken Appleby made 32 saves for his first shutout of the season to lead the Oshawa Generals to a 2-0 win over the Belleville Bulls on Wednesday in Ontario Hockey League action. Jordan 4 For Sale Cheap .Y. - New York City has been selected to host the NBA All-Star weekend in 2015, with the game played at Madison Square Garden and the slam dunk contest and other skills events held at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn. Air Jordan 4 Wholesale . 1 position. The Mustangs (6-0), who beat Queens 50-31 last weekend, earned 17 first-place votes and 287 points in voting by the Football Reporters of Canada. Western was last ranked first in the country in October 2011. AKRON, Ohio -- A man convicted of trying to extort money from former Ohio State University and NFL player Christopher Beanie Wells has been sentenced to nearly 10 years in prison.Twenty-eight-year-old Franklin Conley was sentenced Monday and convicted of extortion-related charges earlier this year.A message left with Conleys attorney wasnt immediately returned Tuesday.Prosecutors say Conley and 29-year-old Patrick Griffin threatened to kill Wells and his family if they didnt pay at leeast $65,000 or introduce the men to a drug supplier.ddddddddddddThe men claimed theyd previously paid Wells and his brother to arrange a drug deal. Wells denied that allegation at Conleys trial.Griffin pleaded guilty to similar charges and was sentenced to a year of house arrest.Wells played four seasons with the Arizona Cardinals. He was released in 2013. ' ' '