Albuquerque Journal

Falcons worried about handling of painkiller­s

‘Excessive’ use in past alarming

- BY JIM LITKE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A string of emails that began in 2010 with the Atlanta Falcons’ head trainer and reached all the way to owner Arthur Blank showed a franchise worried about its “excessive” reliance on painkiller­s to treat players and the potential embarrassm­ent that could cause the team and the NFL.

One topic raised in the email chain concerned the review by an outside agency that found the team spent $81,000 on prescripti­ons for medication­s for players in 2009 — nearly three times the league average.

Nearly every recipient on the email chain — from Blank, president Rich McKay and general manager Thomas Dimitroff to then-head athletic trainer Marty Lauzon — is still with the team, which plays New England in the Super Bowl on Sunday.

“That’s being litigated now. That’s not something we’re going discuss right now,” Dimitroff said Monday night when asked about the emails. “When the time is right, we’ll readdress that.”

The emails were entered into the court record Thursday as part of a proposed class-action lawsuit by more than 1,800 former NFL players who claim they were encouraged by the medical and training staffs of NFL teams to abuse painkiller­s and continue playing without regard for their long-term health.

The case is being heard in the Northern District of California by U.S. District Court Judge William Alsup. The same allegation­s were originally filed in a 2014 class-action lawsuit that is on appeal before the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.

The email chain was presented to the court as an example of thousands of similar documents gathered during discovery that the ex-players’ lawyers want entered into the record. It was coincident­al that the Falcons chain was released before the Super Bowl.

Lauzon was not with the team at the time of the critical review. He became the Falcons’ head trainer in January 2010, and currently serves as the team’s director of sports medicine and performanc­e.

He first wrote to Dimitroff in May 2010 to note the conclusion­s contained in the review by SportPharm, an outside agency brought in by the NFL to look at how teams purchased, dispensed and tracked medication­s, including powerful painkiller­s and prescripti­on drugs. Among the problems Lauzon highlighte­d from SportPharm’s review was the Falcons’ “excessive dispensati­on” of narcotics and other medication­s, which risked creating a “culture of dependency.”

“Within the first days on the job, I was informed that we barely missed a DEA (Drug Enforcemen­t Agency) investigat­ion because of improper billing issues,” Lauzon also told Dimitroff.

One of the central contention­s of the painkiller lawsuit is that teams did not properly keep records about prescripti­ons and which players were getting drugs.

Dimitroff forwarded the email to the owner just hours later.

“I thought it quite important for you to be aware of a rather sensitive subject and one we need to discuss before we include others on this topic matter,” Dimitroff wrote to Blank.

“Agree - we should talk about this together with Rich (McKay, the Falcons’ president),” Blank replied.

It’s not clear what practices were changed as part of the discussion, and there is no evidence the Falcons violated league rules. What’s clear is that Lauzon was warning team executives that practices uncovered during the review could embarrass the team and raise compliance issues with the league.

Lauzon’s first email to Dimitroff also copied in Jeff Fish, who was Atlanta’s strength coach at the time and was released by the club in January 2013. The trainer also expressed concerns that “players at the end of their careers going through medical issues” would seek media attention and “say they abused or are now addicted” to drugs as a result of the club’s practices.

Dimitroff subsequent­ly forwarded the emails to McKay, who remains team president and also serves as chairman of the NFL Competitio­n Committee, making him one of the more influentia­l executives in the league.

McKay reached out the next day to Dr. Elliot Pellman, a rheumatolo­gist who controvers­ially led the NFL’s committee on brain injury at the time and later became a league medical adviser.

He asked Pellman whether Mary Anne Fleming, who was then-director of player benefits in the league office, had recommende­d the Falcons replace their doctors in the wake of the same critical review, and if she was aware who actually administer­ed the club’s day-to-day medical regimen.

“I need to know — is this really true and does she realize the on-site trainer is really in control???” McKay wrote, then added. “I need to keep this confidenti­al …”

Lauzon noted that Fleming had also seen the SportPharm review and recommende­d the Falcons “start clean on all levels” — a new team doctor, head trainer and even a new pharmacy account number.

The proposed class-action lawsuit alleges that NFL trainers distribute­d drugs improperly, and teams failed to properly store and keep accurate records of the drugs, violating federal laws.

 ?? GREG SORBER/JOURNAL ?? St. Pius’ Tatiana Limon, left, is expected to sign with New Mexico State, while La Cueva’s Kate Browning (11) is one of a number of metro-area players heading to UNM.
GREG SORBER/JOURNAL St. Pius’ Tatiana Limon, left, is expected to sign with New Mexico State, while La Cueva’s Kate Browning (11) is one of a number of metro-area players heading to UNM.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States