San Francisco Chronicle

Ex-Raiders president criticizes team

- By Josh Dubow Josh Dubow is an Associated Press writer.

Las Vegas Raiders team President Dan Ventrelle has left the organizati­on less than a year after taking over the job.

Owner Mark Davis announced in a statement Friday that Ventrelle “is no longer with the Raiders organizati­on” but divulged no details around the decision.

Ventrelle said in a statement to the Las Vegas Review-Journal that he was fired in retaliatio­n for bringing concerns from multiple employees to the NFL about a “hostile work environmen­t.”

“When Mark was confronted about these issues, he was dismissive and did not demonstrat­e the warranted level of concern,” Ventrelle said in the statement. “Given this, I informed the NFL of these issues and of Mark’s unacceptab­le response. Soon thereafter, I was fired in retaliatio­n for raising these concerns. I firmly stand by my decision to elevate these issues to protect the organizati­on and its female employees.”

The Raiders had no comment on Ventrelle’s statement.

NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said the league officials “recently became aware of these allegation­s and take them very seriously. We will promptly look into the matter.”

Ventrelle took over as team president on an interim basis in July after Marc Badain resigned. Ventrelle was promoted to the full-time role after the season ended in January.

Ventrelle and Badain played key roles in the Raiders’ move from Oakland to Las Vegas but both are gone before the team’s third season in Nevada.

Ventrelle is the latest in a string of high-ranking business executives to leave the team in the past year. Among them, Chief Financial Officer Ed Villanueva and controller Araxie Grant left with Badain over the summer in what Davis later called an issue of “accounting irregulari­ties.”

Ventrelle joined the Raiders in 2003 and worked his way up to general counsel and executive vice president before taking over as president.

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