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Re: Black rapist Deshaun Watson allegations keep piling up without a word from the NFL

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Fire Roger Goodell

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Jun 28, 2022, 12:05:02 AM6/28/22
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In article <sh6kii$9h0$1...@news.dns-netz.com>
<governo...@gmail.com> wrote:

An NFL player is in the middle of one of the largest
controversies the league has ever seen, and the silence from key
figures has never been more noticeable. New allegations against
Deshaun Watson are coming in, and a lawsuit against the
quarterback has now expanded to include the Houston Texans, but
you’d never know anything was happening if you only paid
attention to the NFL directly or the Cleveland Browns.

On May 24, commissioner Roger Goodell said the league’s
investigation into Watson was winding down. As recently as last
week it was reported that the league had completed its probe.
Now there’s seemingly no end in sight, even though the NFL has
reportedly been investigating Watson for the last 15 months.

Throughout this process the NFL has held the line that it won’t
comment on an ongoing investigation. This is fair for something
that would last a few months, but this has been dragging on for
well over a year. How much more time is needed? Surely the NFL
has learned enough to give a process update, or issue
preliminary findings — even if more allegations roll in. As it
stands the avoidance feels like an attempt by the league to
shield Watson and the teams involved from scrutiny, rather than
find the truth — which is the entire point of an investigation
in the first place.

In the last two weeks we’ve seen two fresh accusations on HBO’s
Real Sports. The New York Times published a wide-ranging and
detailed investigation of their own into Watson’s actions.
Still, the NFL remains silent. Watson has made his Twitter
account private, the Browns refuse to comment on the issue —
kicking the can down the road to the NFL — and where the buck
stops with Goodell and the league office, nobody is willing to
talk.

This is absolutely unacceptable. Fans deserve answers with the
start of the NFL season around the corner. The buying power, not
just of Browns fans but around the league, helps protect, pay,
and shield Watson from scrutiny — because that’s the system
established around the quarterback. Every person asked simply
passes the buck, and the public doesn’t really knows where it
stops; the Browns refer to Goodell, Goodell refers to the
disciplinary committee, and the committee is silent.

The behavior around Watson is not normal. This is not how
investigations have been handled in the past. Calvin Ridley was
suspended for a whole season for gambling $1,500 after a four
month period. The league’s investigation into domestic violence
allegations against Greg Hardy lasted two months in 2015. The
Ray Rice scandal lasted seven months.

Three major NFL investigations combined took less time than has
been devoted to Watson. It feels like the league wants to drag
this out as long as possible so Watson can take the field for
Cleveland this fall, and none of this makes any sense. Rice was
suspended indefinitely, pending the league’s investigation.
Hardy was placed on the commissioner’s exempt list, once again
pending investigation.

Watson has been allowed to participate, as normal, in all
football activities for the last 15 months. A trade market was
allowed to take place. The Browns were allowed to make him the
highest paid quarterback in the NFL, and shield Watson from
financial harm from a possible suspension by reducing his 2022
salary and paying him more on the back end.

There has never been wider, more ranging allegations against a
player. More than two dozen women have now come forward accusing
Watson of sexual assault or harassment. It’s unclear why players
like Rice and Hardy were suspended pending investigation, while
the only punishment Watson has faced is being pressured into
hiding his Twitter account.

Keep in mind, Watson’s treatment also goes against the league’s
own personal conduct policy. Internal NFL documents clearly show
that players who are being investigated by the NFL will be
placed on the commissioner’s exempt list pending the completion
of the investigation — which Watson never was.

If we read between the lines it seems the NFL is saying that
despite having an investigation that concluded a week ago, at no
point did the league find “credible evidence” that a violation
of the personal conduct policy occurred by Watson. If they did,
then the exempt list should have been triggered. Again, from the
NFL’s own policy:

“The NFL will follow a fair and predictable process for
investigating the incident and ultimately taking disciplinary
action if a violation has occurred.”

Has the Watson investigation been fair? No, because numerous
accusers say the NFL never contacted them.
Has the Watson investigation been predictable? No, because he
has received special treatment based on past investigative
processes.
We are now in early June, with the schedule released, training
camp to take place soon, and as it stands a man accused of
sexually harassing and assaulting over 20 women will take to the
field like nothing ever happened. This has been a colossal
failure by the NFL. It feels intentional to shield Watson and
the Browns while hoping the public forgets, while devoting
unparalleled time to the process with zero indication of
findings or progression.

The NFL should be ashamed, but that requires an entity of being
capable of change. Now it’s time for fans and sponsors to demand
answers. This has gone on long enough.

https://www.sbnation.com/nfl/2022/6/9/23161227/deshaun-watson-
allegations-browns-nfl

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