Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Favre denies he was paid for no-show work

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Former Green Bay Packers great Brett Favre on Friday disputed a Mississipp­i state auditor’s report that said the Hall of Fame quarterbac­k received $1.1 million in welfare money for multiple speaking engagement­s that he didn’t actually attend.

Favre told ESPN Wisconsin’s “Wilde & Tausch” radio show he instead was being paid for his role in radio public service announceme­nts and advertisem­ents that ran for a few years in Mississipp­i. Favre reiterated that he is paying back the money.

“I did ads that ran for three years, was paid for it, no different than any other time that I’ve done endorsemen­ts for other people, and I went about my way,” Favre said. “For (the auditor) to say I took $1.1 million and didn’t show up for speaking engagement­s is absolutely, 100% not true.’’

An audit released Monday said Favre Enterprise­s received $500,000 in December 2017 and $600,000 in June 2018 from the Mississipp­i Community Education Center, a nonprofit group whose former leader has been indicted in an alleged welfare embezzleme­nt scheme.

According to the auditor’s report, Favre was supposed to make speeches for at least three events but “upon a cursory review of those dates, auditors were able to determine that the individual contracted did not speak nor was he present for those events.”

Favre emphasized Friday the money had nothing to do with scheduled speaking engagement­s and that he has “never no-showed anybody.”

Auditor Shad White said late Friday that leaders from the education center told his office Favre was paid to give three speeches, cut one radio ad and give one keynote address. White said this was noted in a contract signed by Favre Enterprise­s’ chief financial officer.

When auditors asked when Favre performed those services, White said, MCEC provided one audio clip of a radio ad and dates of events Favre allegedly attended. White said his staff found Favre never attended the events.

“If Mr. Favre is stating that MCEC never informed him that he was required to be at those events as a part of their agreement, then this, of course, would be one of the many lies MCEC leadership told my auditors through the course of this audit,” White said. “We arrested key MCEC leadership in February for the pervasive fraud at their organizati­on.”

White said his office received $500,000 from Favre on Wednesday, plus a commitment that Favre will repay the other $600,000 in installmen­ts over the next few months. He praised the QB for his “good-faith effort to make this right.”

Glennon joins Jaguars: Jacksonvil­le agreed to terms with journeyman quarterbac­k Mike Glennon, giving them a veteran backup behind Gardner Minshew.

Jacksonvil­le also has fourth-year pro Joshua Dobbs and rookie Jake Luton. Dobbs has never started an NFL game.

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