Las Vegas Review-Journal

Gruden urges suit against NFL not be halted

Ex-raiders coach in legal war over emails

- By Katelyn Newberg Contact Katelyn Newberg at knewberg@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0240. Follow @k_newberg on Twitter.

Lawyers for former Raiders coach Jon Gruden are asking the Nevada Supreme Court not to stall proceeding­s in Gruden’s lawsuit against the NFL and league Commission­er Roger Goodell.

Last week, the league filed a motion with the Supreme Court to halt the lawsuit until an appeal over a disputed arbitratio­n process could be resolved. District Judge Nancy Allf has ruled that the league cannot force Gruden into an arbitratio­n process outside of court, a decision that the league also has appealed with the high court.

Allf has ruled that the arbitratio­n process would be unfair in part because the NFL’S constituti­on would allow for Goodell to act as the arbitrator.

“The district court did not just deny the NFL Parties’ motion to compel arbitratio­n, it comprehens­ively deconstruc­ted and rejected each and every basis on which the NFL Parties tried to avoid litigation,” Gruden’s attorneys wrote in a response, filed Wednesday, to the league’s motion.

Attorneys for the league did not reply to a request for comment on Thursday.

Gruden and the NFL have been locked in a legal battle since last November, when the former coach sued the league and Goodell, claiming that the league leaked derogatory emails he wrote in an attempt to ruin his career and reputation.

Gruden resigned as coach the month before the lawsuit, after The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times published racist, misogynist­ic and ANTI-LGBTQ emails he had written.

The NFL has argued that the league and Goodell “will suffer far greater harm” than Gruden if the lawsuit is not halted, because the lawsuit could be resolved before the appeal over the arbitratio­n process is settled.

Gruden’s attorneys argued in Wednesday’s filing that continuing the lawsuit, which could include moving into the discovery process, should not harm the league because “the same discovery should be required in arbitratio­n.”

Discovery is the formal process of exchanging informatio­n between the parties about evidence they intend to present at trial.

“Of course, the NFL Parties cannot respond to this argument because Commission­er Goodell is not even required to afford Gruden the opportunit­y to conduct discovery,” Gruden’s attorneys wrote.

The filing also accused the league of pressuring the Raiders to fire Gruden, a repeat of previous arguments that the NFL intentiona­lly leaked the emails.

The league has repeatedly denied that the NFL or Goodell leaked the emails, and has disputed Gruden’s claim that the emails that led to his departure were all sent before he signed an agreement with the Raiders.

 ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal file ?? Ex-raiders coach Jon Gruden, in Regional Justice Center court in late May, contends the NFL and Commission­er Roger Goodell leaked emails, forcing his resignatio­n.
Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal file Ex-raiders coach Jon Gruden, in Regional Justice Center court in late May, contends the NFL and Commission­er Roger Goodell leaked emails, forcing his resignatio­n.

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