New York Post

INSULT TO INJURY

Scammers target NFLers seeking concussion $$

- By JOSH KOSMAN jkosman@nypost.com

For some NFL vets, getting their fair share of a $1 billion concussion settlement might feel like dodging tackles on the gridiron.

A slew of alleged scammers have been targeting exNFL players as they line up to apply for funds that are expected to range between $300,000 and $5 million each, as the league prepares to start paying its settlement of a six-year-old class-action suit charging that it hid the potential dangers of concussion­s.

Targets have included former Miami Dolphins cornerback Don McNeal, who suffers from multiple sclerosis and dementia after an NFL career that lasted from 1980 to 1989. In an interview, McNeal said he has been forced to resist offers for predatory loans as he scrapes by with an NFL pension that’s worth less than $28,000 a year.

“I didn’t do it. I wasn’t tempted,” McNeal told The Post, holding out hopes that he’ll be able to keep between 65 and 70 percent of his settlement after lawyers and Medicaid get their cut.

Other players, anticipati­ng they’ll finally see their money late next year as they scramble to meet an August applicatio­n deadline, haven’t been so discipline­d. About 10 percent of those in the settlement class, which com- prises about 20,000 former NFL players, have taken out loans against their expected awards, according to an estimate by one lawyer representi­ng the players who asked not to be named, citing pending litigation. Not

Former Dolphins player Don McNeal (inset), who is due to receive some financial relief from the NFL concussion settlement, reports being approached by suspicious “experts” offering fee-based services.

every player in the class will wind up qualifying for money.

A pitch to former players obtained by The Post from a firm called Trial Fund Manager LLC was offering loans with rates of 24 percent — which it called “low cost capital” — better, it said, than competing loans charging 40 percent a year against potential concussion settlement­s.

Trial Fund Manager lawyer Anoush Hakimi told The Post his firm has since decided not to make concussion settlement loans.

In mid-March, five former NFL players who had registered for the settlement appeared to be working with a company called NFL Case Consulting, which, despite its name, isn’t affiliated with the NFL, according to court papers recently filed by the league’s claims administra­tor.

“Their literature has NFL all over it appearing to be the NFL,” according to one former player who said he was hit up for a 15 percent processing fee.

Christophe­r Seeger — who, as co-lead counsel in the class-action suit has himself lately fielded complaints over lawyer fees in the case — has filed an injunction against NFL Case Consulting to stop what it views as improper communicat­ion with the settlement class.

Richard Scheff, a lawyer representi­ng NFL Case Consulting, told The Post the firm is “working to assuage some concerns.”

Late last month, Scheff, of law firm Montgomery McCracken, told the court in a letter that NFL Case Consulting is changing its name to Case Strategies Group. From now on, Scheff wrote, the firm will use disclaimer­s stating it is not a law firm nor is affiliated with or endorsed by the NFL or the court.

 ??  ?? More hits Jack Tatum, aka The Assassin, in a Raiders-Vikings game in 1977.
More hits Jack Tatum, aka The Assassin, in a Raiders-Vikings game in 1977.

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