Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Concussion awards discrimina­te against Blacks, lawyers say

- By Maryclaire Dale

PHILADELPH­IA » Dementia tests in the NFL concussion litigation allow doctors to use different baseline standards for Black and white retired players, making it more difficult for Blacks to show injury and qualify for awards, lawyers for two ex-players argued in court filings Tuesday.

The settlement fund has so far paid about $720 million to retired players for neurocogni­tive problems linked to NFL concussion­s, including more than $300 million for dementia. The dementia claims have proven especially contentiou­s — three-quarters of them have been denied, often after challenges from the NFL.

Lawyers for ex-players Kevin Henry and Najeh Davenport said their clients were denied awards “based on a discrimina­tory testing regime” that weighs demographi­c factors including race. Both men would have qualified for awards had race not been considered, they said.

“Black former players have been automatica­lly assumed, through a statistica­l manipulati­on called ‘race-norming,’ to have started with worse cognitive functionin­g than White former players,” the lawyers wrote.

That makes it harder to show they’ve suffered a deficit and deserve compensati­on, they said.

“The use of a deliberate, explicit, racial classifica­tion — with Black and white former players automatica­lly subjected to different standards — is a blatant violation of the law,” lawyer Cy Smith wrote in the motion, which seeks to make the tests

race-neutral.

An NFL spokesman did not immediatel­y return messages seeking comment Tuesday. Christophe­r Seeger, the lead players lawyer in the litigation, said he “has not seen any evidence of racial bias in the settlement program,” but pledged to review the issue.

He said the testing was designed by leading experts and approved by the presiding judge in the case, Senior U.S. District Judge Anita B. Brody of Philadelph­ia. And he said it’s up to the evaluating physician to decide whether to include race as a factor.

Henry, 51, who played for the Pittsburgh Steelers from 1993-2000, said his claim was denied although he suffers from headaches, depression and memory loss that leave him unable to hold a job.

Davenport, 41, who played for the Steelers, Green Bay Packers and Indianapol­is Colts from 2002-2008, said he suffered more than 10 concussion­s, including one that broke his eye socket and left him unconsciou­s. He was approved for an award until the NFL appealed, asking that his test results be recalculat­ed using racial norms, Smith said. By that measuremen­t, his claim would fail.

The special master in the case has so far rejected the NFL’s appeal, but asked that Davenport’s doctor justify his findings.

The motion, along with a second potential classactio­n filing, asks Brody to bar race as a factor in the calculatio­ns, and let any Blacks tested in such a manner have their scores recalculat­ed if their dementia claims were denied. The settlement pays up to $3 million for a moderate dementia finding, although the average dementia award, including both early and moderate dementia, is just under $600,000.

“The NFL has a choice to make, and the choice is between treating the lives of its Black players like they matter, or continuing with the current course,” Smith told The Associated Press.

 ?? MORRY GASH - STAFF, AP ?? File-Green Bay Packers’ Najeh Davenport breaks away from St. Louis Rams’ Rich Coady (25) for a 40-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter Monday, Nov. 29, 2004, in Green Bay, Wis.
MORRY GASH - STAFF, AP File-Green Bay Packers’ Najeh Davenport breaks away from St. Louis Rams’ Rich Coady (25) for a 40-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter Monday, Nov. 29, 2004, in Green Bay, Wis.

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