• Loading stock data...
Thursday, May 9, 2024
Law

Lawyers For Commanders, Accusers Clash as Investigations Continue

  • A lawyer for the Commanders and owner Dan Snyder took to the airwaves on Friday.
  • Attorney for many of the accusers pushed back in a letter to another Snyder lawyer.
Snyder Sale
Mark J. Rebilas/USA TODAY Sports

An attorney for the Washington Commanders and owner Dan Snyder took to the radio Friday, using the airtime to lay out Snyder’s side, as the region — and much of the NFL — waits for Congress to release its final findings after a nearly yearlong investigation. 

Lawyer John Brownlee gave multiple interviews on two major sports talk stations in the Washington, D.C., area. 

In between those interviews, attorneys Lisa Banks and Debra Katz, who represent more than 40 former Commanders employees, pushed back. 

They wrote that they “demand” Tom Davis — another Snyder attorney — “immediately retract the false and defamatory statements” made against their three clients in his Wednesday letter.

“We also ask that your client immediately provide the [Beth] Wilkinson findings [from the NFL’s first investigation into the Commanders] to the Committee; waive all NDAs for current and former employees for purposes of speaking with the Committee; and offer full and unfettered access by the Committee to team information and documents,” Banks and Katz wrote. “Otherwise, Dan Snyder and the Washington Commanders should stop complaining about the evidentiary basis of the Committee’s investigation.”

The dueling letters and Sndyer’s push with the local media come as the House Oversight Committee is expected to release its final report on the investigation in the coming weeks. 

Many of the same allegations probed by Congress are also the focus of the NFL’s second independent investigation led by former SEC Chair Mary Jo White

Davis is a former chair of the House Oversight Committee. He wrote that current Oversight Committee chair Carolyn Maloney and the other Democrats in charge of the committee “will fail in its effort to push Mr. Snyder from the NFL.” 

“My only hope is that the American people — who are the ultimate judges — will see this investigation for what it is, a politically inspired hatchet job, and begin the process of removing the stain this investigation has placed on the Committee that I so respect and love,” Davis wrote. 

Beyond the three former Commanders employees, Davis in this letter and Brownlee in his radio interviews took aim at former team president Bruce Allen, who was deposed by Congress last month.

Allen was fired in December 2019 after a decade with the team — and Snyder’s attorneys lay much of the blame for the team’s alleged hostile workplace culture that led the NFL to fine the Commanders $10 million in July 2021 at the conclusion of Wilkinson’s investigation. 

Allen’s email exchanges with Gruden — when Gruden was an ESPN analyst — were published by The New York Times and Wall Street Journal last October. Those racist, misogynistic and homophoic emails from Allen’s team account led Gruden to resign as head coach of the Las Vegas Raiders. 

Gruden is suing the NFL, a case that is still pending in Nevada. Both the NFL and Snyder have denied they were the source of the leaked emails. 

“The repeated attempts by your client to blame former team president Bruce Allen for the toxic workplace culture will certainly fail,” Banks and Katz said. “While we have no knowledge whether Mr. Allen was a party to offensive emails, as your letter states, we do know that none of our clients has alleged that Mr. Allen played any role in the harassment or abuse they suffered or witnessed.

“In fact, most have never even met Mr. Allen. It is difficult to credit the team’s insistence that because Mr. Allen is gone, the problems with the team’s culture are in the past.  Due to the coordinated efforts of the team and the NFL to bury the findings of the Wilkinson investigation, we cannot know all of what happened, who was responsible, or whether those issues have been adequately addressed.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

NFL’s Christmas Games Could Be Holding Up Schedule-Release Bonanza

The news of two holiday games didn’t break until late March.

ESPN Narrowly Avoids Disaster on Hurricanes-Rangers Broadcast

The network briefly switched playoff games in crunch time of Canes-Rangers.

Folding Franchises, Cattle Fencing, a Nixed TV Deal: Can the AFL Survive?

The NFL Network kills a distribution deal with the AFL after seeing the extent of the league’s issues.

Tom Brady’s Netflix Roast Offers Rare Reminder of Robert Kraft Allegations

The Patriots’ owner was charged with soliciting prostitution in Florida in 2019.
podcast thumbnail mobile
Front Office Sports Today

The Story of Women’s College Basketball’s Historic Season

0:00
0:00

Featured Today

May 6, 2023; Miami Gardens, Florida, USA; Red Bull driver Max Verstappen (1) of the Netherlands walks through the garage area following qualifying for the Miami Grand Prix at Miami International Autodrome.

Max Verstappen Is Unstoppable. Is That Hurting F1 With New American Fans?

Formula One could be facing an inevitable plateau in the United States.
Apr 17, 2024; Tempe, Arizona, USA; Arizona Coyotes left wing Lawson Crouse (67) celebrates after scoring a goal during the third period against the Edmonton Oilers at Mullett Arena.
May 4, 2024

Everything to Know About the Coyotes’ Second Chance at NHL Life

The clock is ticking in order to restart a Phoenix expansion team.
April 28, 2024

Just Like We Drew It Up? Stadium Renderings Can Excite, Confound, and Anger

During a historic wave of development, drawings wield more power than ever.
The scene in the green room behind the NFL Draft Theater in Detroit on Tuesday, April 23, 2024. Thirteen college players who will be picked in the first round will be waiting in this large room with friends, family, agents and college coaches on Thursday night.
April 27, 2024

More NFL Draft Prospects Are Staying Home, and TV Networks Are Adjusting

Whether making or missing out on millions, more prospects are staying home.

Careers

Powered By

Careers in Sports

Looking for a new job? Check out these featured listings and search for openings all over the world.
Live Nation
Multiple - USA Careers
Adidas
Multiple - USA Careers
FanDuel
Multiple - USA Careers

Former Ohtani Interpreter Pleading Guilty to Bank Fraud, False Tax Return

Ippei Mizuhara faces up to 33 years in federal prison for his crimes.
April 26, 2024

Iowa Athletes Sue State, Citing ‘Unconstitutional’ Tracking of Gambling

They claim investigators didn’t get warrants, misled about the purpose of questioning.
May 7, 2024

Another Court Sides With Zion Williamson’s Years-Old Firing of Unregistered Agent

There isn’t a rigorous or nationwide standard to rep a college athlete.
Sponsored

Rapid Returns: How Technology Is Getting You Back to Your Seat

How Oracle’s POS technology is helping fans get back to their seats faster.
April 26, 2024

‘Jaw-Dropping’ Noncompete Ban Could Shake Up Pro Coaching, Experts Say

Many pro coaches are banned from interviewing for other jobs without team approval.
April 22, 2024

Chinese Government Says Swimming Doping Story Is ‘Fake News’

23 Chinese swimmers tested positive before the 2021 Olympics.
April 18, 2024

DOJ to Pay $100 Million to Gymnasts Over FBI Failures

The reported settlement brings victim payouts to nearly $1 billion.
April 16, 2024

O.J. Simpson Lawyer Says He Won’t Shield Estate From Goldman, Brown Families

The executor of Simpson’s will had previously said the Goldmans would get ‘zero.’