The Legal Battle Continues

The legal battle between the NFL, NFLPA and saints players over commissioner Roger Goodell’s suspensions continues, with no immediate end in sight.  The NFL filed its opposition on Wednesday to the motion to stop the suspensions of the four current and former Saints players.

The NFL’s actions follow the filing by the NFLPA, representing Will Smith, Anthony Hargrove and Scott Fujita, and by Jonathan Vilma on Monday in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana.  Monday’s filings were seeking to have NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell remove himself from the appeals process as it relates to the suspensions he issued to the four players last week. That’s something that the Commissioner, to date, has been unwilling to do. Under the CBA, Goodell can designate responsibility for the internal appeal to someone else.

In its motion, the NFLPA wrote that the, “players seek only what the law requires: an objectively unbiased arbitrator who can provide them with a fundamentally fair process and a bona fide opportunity to defend themselves against the Commissioner’s false charges concerning an alleged “bounty” scheme to encourage injuring NFL players.”

The NFLPA in its motion argued that although Goodell was given the power in the current CBA to discipline players for conduct detrimental to the game, he may only do so if he complies with “governing legal standards.”  The NFL is challenging the players’ argument that Goodell failed to comply with governing legal standards.

On September 7, in accordance with the CBA, a three person panel reviewed Goodell’s previous disciplinary decision and then overturned the suspensions of  Will Smith (4-games), Johnathan Vilma (entire season), Anthony Hargrove (8-games), and Scott Fujita (4-games). The panel said that Goodell was punishing the players for their involvement in a pay-to-play scheme which falls under the jurisdiction of the System Arbitrator and therefore overturned the suspensions. It directed the  Commissioner to refine the parameters of the suspensions and to clarify why discipline was being imposed. Following that decision, Smith, Vilma, Hargrove and Fujita each met with Goodell.

“[The] Commissioner went through the motions of receiving additional evidence and meeting with the players, purportedly to determine if any discipline remained appropriate under his conduct detrimental authority as required by the CBA Appeals Panel,” the NFLPA writes in its motion.

As evidence of the lack of due process the NFLPA points out that the Commissioner re-issued 28 of the 31 games he previously imposed and alleges that his decision ignored conflicting testimony, evidence and failed to objectively evaluate the facts.  The motion states that “despite representations that the Commissioner would objectively reconsider the discipline, the NFL orchestrated a charade which took its prior disregard for fair process to new heights.”

The internal (league) appeals hearings for all four players are currently scheduled to take place in New York City next Tuesday according to NFL.com.  The filings by the players are asking U.S. District Court Judge Ginger Berrigan to bar Goodell from handling any further action in the bounty matter and appoint a neutral arbitrator.

I know this: We believe that it was our responsibility to do everything to protect the integrity of the game and player health and safety,” Goodell said Tuesday at the league owners’ meetings in Chicago on the Saints bounty scandal. “This information was brought to us three years ago. We then had new information come up just under a year ago late last season, followed it and I think established very clearly that this was occurring.

“We disclosed it and we are dealing with it because bounties don’t belong in football, and we are going to make sure they aren’t there in the future. That is good for the game.”

 

In addition, NFL fans have gotten into the legal fray, as a group of Saints fans filed a class action lawsuit against Roger Goodell for his actions against the Saints, which have reduced the competitiveness of the team and the value of their season tickets.  The fans stated that they purchased season tickets expecting “that the Saints would be capable of competitively fielding a contending team comprised of the finest athletes, and the best coaches … without dictatorial, unreasonable, vindictive, and unfounded, interference from the commissioner and the league, devoid of due process,” the complaint said.  The class action suit seeks $5 million in damages.

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