Daily Press

House to allow Snyder to testify virtually

- By Stephen Whyno

WASHINGTON — The U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Reform has accepted an offer for Washington Commanders owner Dan Snyder to testify virtually July 28.

Chairwoman Carolyn B. Maloney wrote a letter to attorney Karen Patton Seymour on Tuesday saying he would be allowed to testify via Zoom under the conditions set out by the committee’s initial subpoena “to ensure that Mr. Snyder’s testimony will be full and complete and will not be restricted in the way it would be if the deposition were conducted voluntaril­y.”

The committee is set to give Snyder access to exhibition­s used in prior deposition­s and interview transcript­s as well as descriptio­ns of redacted informatio­n, which were among the elements requested by his representa­tives in a previous letter. July 28 was also one of their preferred dates after declining several previous invitation­s.

Snyder did not appear when first invited along with NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell, who testified virtually June 22, with prior obligation­s and internatio­nal travel given among the reasons.

His camp has until noon today to confirm Snyder will appear before the committee, which launched an investigat­ion into the team’s workplace culture last year after the league did not release a report of its independen­t review into the organizati­on, which prompted a $10 million fine.

Congress has since looked into accusation­s of pervasive sexual harassment­s of women who worked for the team by Snyder and other executives. According to a document released by the committee, Snyder conducted a “shadow investigat­ion” that sought to discredit former employees making accusation­s of workplace sexual harassment, hired private investigat­ors to intimidate witnesses and used an overseas lawsuit as a pretext to obtain phone records and emails.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP ?? Congress has looked into female Commanders employees’ accusation­s of pervasive sexual harassment­s by owner Dan Snyder and other executives.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP Congress has looked into female Commanders employees’ accusation­s of pervasive sexual harassment­s by owner Dan Snyder and other executives.

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