Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

DC attorney general sues NFL, Commanders, claiming collusion

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WASHINGTON (AP) >> Washington Commanders owner Dan Snyder and NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell were sued by the District of Columbia on Thursday, accused of colluding to deceive fans by lying about an inquiry into “sexual misconduct and a persistent­ly hostile work environmen­t” within the team.

The individual club and the league as a whole were also named in the consumer protection civil lawsuit, which D.C. Attorney General Karl Racine said was based on his office’s investigat­ion that began in the fall of 2021.

Racine said the defendants jointly “misled the public” about the contents of, and procedure surroundin­g lawyer Beth Wilkinson’s examinatio­n of the team’s workplace culture that began in 2020. His office seeks a court order that will force the league to release Wilkinson’s findings.

“For years, the team and its owner have caused very real and very serious harm and then lied about it to dodge accountabi­lity,” Racine said, also pointing a finger at Goodell and the NFL. “They did all of this to hide the truth, protect their images and let the profits continue to roll.”

Racine said that even though the team practices in Virginia and plays its games in Maryland, it is strongly connected to Washington and violated D.C. consumers’ rights. Racine said the capital city’s Consumer Protection Procedures Act provides for fines of up to $5,000 per lie — which his office estimated could result in millions of dollars in penalties.

Asked about a parallel review into the Commanders’ finances and withholdin­g money from season-ticket holders, Racine said, “There’ll be more news on that next week.” The U.S. House Committee for Oversight and Reform, which has one of a handful of other investigat­ions into Snyder, referred a case about the club’s potential financial impropriet­ies to the Federal Trade Commission in April, citing questionab­le business practices related to ticket revenue.

NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said Wilkinson’s investigat­ion was thoroughly and comprehens­ively conducted, the league publicly released a summary and imposed a record-setting fine of $10 million on the team and its ownership.

“We reject the legally unsound and factually baseless allegation­s made today by the D.C. Attorney General against the NFL and Commission­er Goodell and will vigorously defend against those claims,” McCarthy wrote in an email.

Lawyers representi­ng the Commanders said Snyder and his wife and co-owner, Tanya, acknowledg­ed an unacceptab­le workplace culture more than two years ago and “have apologized many times for allowing that to happen.”

“We agree with AG Racine on one thing: the public needs to know the truth,” Commanders counsel John Brownlee and Stuart Nash said in a statement sent through a team spokespers­on. “Although the lawsuit repeats a lot of innuendo, half-truths and lies, we welcome this opportunit­y to defend the organizati­on — for the first time — in a court of law and to establish, once and for all, what is fact and what is fiction.”

The filing Thursday in D.C. Superior Court says Snyder “cultivated an environmen­t ... that glorifies sexual harassment and punishes victims for speaking out.” According to the complaint, team “employees say the workplace was ‘like the mafia’ ... creating a culture of fear and paranoia.”

“The misconduct did not just go to the top; it originated there,” the court filing says, noting that a former long-time team executive said employees referred to Snyder as the “Chief Harassing Officer.”

The complaint outlines ways in which the attorney general’s office says Snyder has been accused of “further cultivatin­g the team’s culture of sexual harassment,” such as bringing “women believed to be sex workers to work-related events,” overseeing the team’s cheerleadi­ng program and exercising “control over everything, from which cheerleadi­ng candidates made the cut, to which photos were used in the cheerleade­r calendar, to how revealing the cheerleadi­ng uniforms would be.”

The team remains the subject of multiple other ongoing investigat­ions, including by the attorney general of Virginia, Congress and the NFL. Goodell has said there is no timetable for when former U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White’s review on behalf of the league will be completed.

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