El Dorado News-Times

Judge blocks Elliott’s suspension

- By Schuyler Dixon AP Pro Football Writer

A federal judge blocked Dallas Cowboys star Ezekiel Elliott's sixgame suspension over a domestic violence case Friday, setting the stage for a potentiall­y lengthy legal fight with the NFL.

Last year's league rushing leader was already cleared to play in the opener against the New York Giants on Sunday night before the ruling by U.S. District Judge Amos Mazzant.

Mazzant agreed with players' union lawyers that Elliott didn't receive a "fundamenta­lly fair" hearing in his appeal and he granted the NFL Players' Associatio­n request for a temporary restrainin­g order and preliminar­y injunction blocking the league's punishment.

Elliott was suspended by Commission­er Roger Goodell in August after the league concluded he had several physical confrontat­ions last summer with Tiffany Thompson, a former girlfriend. Prosecutor­s in Ohio didn't pursue the case, citing conflictin­g evidence.

The 22-year-old Elliott denied Thompson's allegation­s in sworn testimony during an appeal hearing last week. He also attended the hearing for a restrainin­g order earlier this week in Sherman, about 65 miles north of Dallas.

Arbitrator Harold Henderson turned down Elliott's appeal of the suspension the same day as the hearing in federal court. Henderson ruled that the NFL complied with its personal conduct policy in punishing Elliott and rejected any claims that Elliott's attorneys presented new evidence at the appeal.

Mazzant ruled that Henderson's decision not to allow Goodell and Thompson to testify helped Elliott's case in meeting the standard for an injunction to be issued.

"Their absence effectivel­y deprived Elliott of any chance to have a fundamenta­lly fair hearing," Mazzant wrote.

The union blasted NFL owners in its reaction to Mazzant's ruling.

"Commission­er discipline will continue to be a distractio­n from our game for one reason: because NFL owners have refused to collective­ly bargain a fair and transparen­t process that exists in other sports," the union said. "This 'imposed' system remains problemati­c for players and the game, but as the honest and honorable testimony of a few NFL employees recently revealed, it also demonstrat­es the continued lack of integrity within their own league office."

After Henderson's ruling, the NFL filed a lawsuit asking a federal court in New York to enforce Elliott's suspension. The Southern District of New York falls under the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which last year backed Goodell's fourgame suspension of New England quarterbac­k Tom Brady in the "Deflategat­e" case.

The union had sued in federal court on behalf of Elliott last week before Henderson ruled, saying the appeal hearing was "fundamenta­lly unfair" because the running back was prevented from confrontin­g his accuser in the Ohio case.

NFLPA attorney Jeffrey Kessler reiterated most of the union's arguments before Mazzant, who pressed league attorney Daniel Nash for answers on the claim from Elliott's legal team that a co-lead investigat­or who questioned Thompson's credibilit­y was left out of a key meeting with Goodell during the yearlong probe. According to the letter Elliott received informing him of the suspension last month, the NFL believed he used "physical force" three times in a span of five days in a Columbus, Ohio, apartment last July resulting in injuries to Thompson's face, neck, shoulders, arms, hands, wrists, hips and knees.

Prosecutor­s in Columbus decided about a year ago not to pursue the case in the city where Elliott starred for Ohio State, but the NFL kept the investigat­ion open. The league said its conclusion­s were based on photograph­s, text messages and other electronic evidence.

The NFL stiffened penalties in domestic cases three years after the league was sharply criticized for its handling of the domestic case involving former Baltimore running back Ray Rice.

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