Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hunt admits lying about hotel assault

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Running back Kareem Hunt acknowledg­ed that he misled the Kansas City Chiefs about his role in a February assault in a Cleveland hotel that ultimately led to his release this week.

During a live interview with ESPN on Sunday, the NFL’s reigning rushing champion also said that league officials never spoke to him about the incident while conducting their own investigat­ion, and that he never saw the security camera video until TMZ Sports posted it Friday.

In the course of a few hours, Hunt went from preparing for Sunday’s game in Oakland to being sent home from the practice facility. He was then placed on the NFL’s Commission­er Exemption List, summoned back to the team facility and told that he was being released.

“They believed that I lied to them. I lied to them,” Hunt said. “They pretty much said we love you, everybody cares about you, and just we have to let you go. It was a tough conversati­on. And the Chiefs did what was right. I made a poor decision and I’m willing to take full responsibi­lity.”

In the grainy, graphic video, Hunt is seen getting into an argument with a woman and several men step in to hold him back. He later pushes one of the men, knocking down a woman that Hunt admitted he did not know, and eventually kicks her while she lays on the ground.

“The Chiefs are right. I didn’t tell them everything,” Hunt said. “My actions caused this and I really wish I could apologize to them and let them know there’s no hard feelings.”

The video brought immediate comparison­s to the footage of former Ravens running back Ray Rice, who was seen punching out his then-fiancée in an elevator. That incident led to a lengthy legal saga, and it culminated in an investigat­ion by Robert Mueller into the NFL’s mishandlin­g of it.

The league eventually hired more staff to conduct such investigat­ions, and announced it would take a more active role in handling similar cases in the future.

The NFL made multiple attempts to obtain the video of Hunt, but the hotel said corporate policy only allowed footage to be given to law enforcemen­t. The NFL then contacted Cleveland police, but the department said Saturday it did not pursue the video because it was not a felony-level case.

When asked whether the NFL spoke directly to Hunt about it, he replied: “No, they have not.”

The league uses a standard investigat­ive process in such cases in which witnesses, complainan­ts and the police are contacted before the player is. Because the complainan­ts never responded to NFL requests via email, text messages and formal letters, the police decided not to bring charges against Hunt.

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