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Patriots CB Jack Jones to serve year of probation, community service in firearms case

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- New England Patriots defensive back Jack Jones has agreed to serve one year of probation and 48 hours of community service in exchange for prosecutors dropping eight of the nine weapons charges he faced in connection with his June arrest at a security checkpoint at Boston's Logan Airport for allegedly having two loaded guns in his carry-on bag.

The deal was reached during a hearing Tuesday in Boston Municipal court.

Jones, 25, was arrested in June after two firearms were found in what police identified as being his carry-on luggage. He was charged with two counts each of unlawful possession of a firearm, carrying a loaded firearm, possession of a large-capacity magazine and possession of ammunition without a firearm identification card. He was also charged with an airport security violation.

Tuesday's court filing showed that the Suffolk County District Attorney's office dropped all the weapons charges. He received pre-trial probation for the security violation.

In a motion stating its decision not to continue to pursue the case further, the state attorney's office said it determined it couldn't prove their case beyond a reasonable doubt "that Mr. Jones had knowledge that he possessed the firearms in his bag at the time of the incident."

"Jack is grateful to have the case resolved and is looking forward to playing football," Jones attorney, Rosemary Scapicchio, NFL Network Insider Mike Garafolo.

While this is the end of Jones' legal case, it's yet to be determined whether he will face further discipline under the NFL's personal conduct policy.

Asked Wednesday whether Jones would play in New England's season opener against the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday, coach Bill Belichick confirmed Jones "should be available," adding the team will let the league handle any potential discipline.

"I'm not gonna get into that," Belichick said. "Talk to the league. See what they have to say. Anything from them would come from them, not from me."

Jones has spoken only briefly since his arrest, referring all questions on his case to his attorney.

"When I get out here on the football field, it's all ball," Jones said in August. "I just come out here to play ball and give it my all, and do what I'm supposed to for the team."

Despite his pending case he made the Patriots' initial 53-man roster.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.