National Post (National Edition)

Women’s rights group blasts Browns for signing Hunt

‘Money matters more than women’

- Des Bieler

In announcing the signing of Kareem Hunt on Monday, the Cleveland Browns general manager John Dorsey said in a statement the Browns, “understand and respect the complexity of questions and issues in signing a player with Kareem’s history and do not condone his actions.”

Dorsey added the running back, who was released by the Chiefs in November after video emerged that showed him shoving and kicking a woman, “took full responsibi­lity for his egregious actions and showed true remorse.”

The 23-year-old running back, who led the NFL in rushing yards as a rookie in 2017, was added to the Browns’ roster before the NFL completed its investigat­ion of the incident, which took place earlier last year in a Cleveland hotel. The signing was subsequent­ly criticized by both women’s rights activists and supporters of Colin Kaepernick.

Since becoming a free agent in March 2017, Kaepernick has been unable to latch on with an NFL team, despite having enjoyed statistica­l and on-field success in the league, including leading the 49ers to a Super Bowl appearance in 2013.

The 31-year-old quarterbac­k is pursuing a grievance filing against the league, accusing team owners of colluding to punish him for being the first player to protest racial injustice by taking a knee during the national anthem.

The difference between Kae per nick’ s apparent transgress­ion and what Hunt did was cited on the internet by more than a few observers Monday, including Bleacher Report’s Mike Freeman, who tweeted, “Kareem Hunt is ON VIDEO kicking a woman while she’s on the ground and still got signed. Thank God he didn’t take a knee protesting social justice.”

Hunt is expected to be suspended by the league for the start of the 2019 season, possibly for six games, per the league’s guidelines on players accused of domestic violence.

The Browns released a statement from Hunt on Monday in which he said his actions were “wrong and inexcusabl­e,” declaring, “I am committed to following the necessary steps to learn and to be a better and healthier person from this situation.”

The president of the National Organizati­on for Women, Toni Van Pelt, described the signing as sending a “message” that “money matters more than women.” She told NBC News, “Women don’t matter to the NFL, which is rather surprising because they’re a big part of the viewer audience.”

USA Today columnist Nancy Armour wrote Monday that while some might “howl in outrage at the NFL’S continued disregard for women or express disgust that its only principle remains self-interest,” it was inevitable that a team would eventually sign Hunt.

Going forward, she said, the important thing will be to put him and the Browns “on notice and demand they follow through on the lofty intentions” they expressed Monday.

“It would be nice if we lived in a world where there was zero tolerance for physical and sexual abuse, where the health and safety of women mattered as much as the power and privilege of men,” Armour wrote. “But we don’t. ... Now that the Browns have (signed Hunt), it’s up to them and the NFL to ensure more good comes out of it than a few touchdowns and 100-yard games.”

Hunt has personal ties to Cleveland, having grown up near the city before starring in college for Toledo. Hunt was also drafted by Dorsey when he was in charge of personnel for the Chiefs.

Dan Labbe of the Cleveland Plain Dealer noted that before Dorsey took Hunt in the third round of the 2017 draft, he drafted Tyreek Hill in the fifth round in 2016 de- spite the wide receiver’s 2014 arrest and subsequent guilty plea for allegedly choking his pregnant girlfriend and punching her in the stomach.

“The Cleveland Browns, with this signing, declare from ownership on down, that talent and winning matter above all else,” Labbe wrote. “Maybe that’s the point. The cold reality is that, in the NFL, no one keeps their job by taking a stand and, in turn, losing games.”

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Kareem Hunt

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