Chattanooga Times Free Press

NFL gets timeout in Saints fan’s lawsuit

- BY KEVIN MCGILL

NEW ORLEANS — Louisiana’s Supreme Court has ruled the NFL can hold off, for now, on providing documents and answering questions in a New Orleans Saints fan’s lawsuit over referees’ failure to call crucial penalties in a January playoff game won by the Los Angeles Rams.

Attorney Anthony LeMon said the state’s highest court issued the stay order Wednesday while it considers the league’s appeal of a lower court judge’s ruling allowing his suit against the league to continue. That judge had said NFL commission­er Roger Goodell and game officials must answer questions under oath in New Orleans in September.

However, LeMon said the stay will likely mean the deposition­s of Goodell and the officials will be put off until October or later — if the suit is allowed to proceed.

The NFL did provide some limited answers to the extensive questions in LeMon’s lawsuit, which alleges fraud and seeks damages over officials’ failure to flag a blatant penalty by a Rams defensive back who made a helmet-to-helmet hit on a Saints receiver with a pass on the way late in the NFC championsh­ip game. The Rams won and advanced to the Super Bowl in Atlanta, where they lost to the New England Patriots.

In answers filed late Tuesday and made public Wednesday — before the stay order by the high court — the league acknowledg­ed video shows pass interferen­ce and unnecessar­y roughness penalties should have been called.

However, it also said: “To the NFL Defendants’ knowledge, no member of the ‘NFC Championsh­ip game officiatin­g crew’ observed NFL player rule violations during the Play in real-time at full speed. The officials designated to cover the area of the field in which the contact occurred reported that during the Play they observed the ball, the receiver, and the defender arrive at the area simultaneo­usly with the defender leading with his arms for a block at the receiver’s chest.”

The league objected to answering questions, based on game video, about whether side judge Gary Cavaletto was reaching for his penalty flag after the play occurred and whether down judge Patrick Turner gestured to dissuade him from doing so.

Among the reason league attorneys gave for objecting are that the questions are “oppressive, harassing and not relevant” to the lawsuit, and that it demands answers regarding “subjective beliefs.”

The league also declined to say whether any disciplina­ry action was taken against the officials.

The lawsuit seeks $75,000 in damages. LeMon has said he intends for any money won to go to former Saints star Steve Gleason’s charity to aid people with neuromuscu­lar diseases. Gleason was diagnosed with ALS, commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s Disease, in 2011.

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