Starkville Daily News

Favre must remain in welfare lawsuit, Mississipp­i argues

- By EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS

JACKSON — A judge should ignore a request from retired NFL quarterbac­k Brett Favre to be removed from a civil lawsuit that seeks to recover misspent welfare money in Mississipp­i's largest-ever public corruption case, the state Department of Human Services said this week.

Millions of federal welfare dollars were intended to help low-income Mississipp­i residents — some of the poorest people in the country — but were instead squandered on projects supported by wealthy or well-connected people, including projects backed by Favre, prosecutor­s say.

No criminal charges have been brought against the NFL Hall of Famer, although other people have pleaded guilty to their part in the misspendin­g.

Favre's attorneys argue the Department of Human Services is suing Favre, “a Mississipp­i and national celebrity,” to deflect from the department's own role in allowing fraud, and have have filed two sets of papers urging a Mississipp­i judge to dismiss Favre from the suit.

Kaytie Pickett, an attorney for the department, responded that Favre's attorneys failed to provide solid legal arguments to get their client out of the lawsuit.

“Favre's submission is not a motion to dismiss; it is a long press release,” Pickett wrote in court papers filed Monday. “The court should disregard Favre's diatribe.”

The Department of Human Services last year sued Favre and more than three dozen other people or businesses.

The suit says money was misspent on things like $5 million to help build a volleyball arena that Favre supported at his alma mater

FILE - Former NFL quarterbac­k Brett Favre speaks to the media in Jackson, Miss., Oct. 17, 2018. A Mississipp­i agency says a judge should reject Favre’s requests to be removed from a lawsuit that seeks to recover millions of dollars in misspent welfare money. Favre’s attorneys have sought to get the Hall of Fame quarterbac­k dismissed as one of more than 30 defendants in the civil suit that the state Department of Human Services filed in 2022. Kaytie Pickett, an attorney for the department, says in court papers filed Monday, March 13, 2023, that Favre failed to make solid legal arguments and a judge should ignore his “diatribe.” (AP Photo/rogelio V. Solis, File)

the University of Southern Mississipp­i, where his daughter played the sport, and $1.7 million toward developmen­t of a concussion treatment drug by a company in which Favre was an investor.

Those who have pleaded guilty to criminal charges include John Davis, a former director of the Mississipp­i Department of Human Services; and Nancy New, the director of a nonprofit organizati­on who had ties to Favre and the volleyball and concussion drug projects.

Favre has repaid $1.1 million he received for speaking

fees from New's organizati­on, which spent Temporary Assistance to Needy Families money with approval from the Department of Human Services under Davis. Mississipp­i Auditor Shad White said Favre, who lives in Mississipp­i, never showed up to give those speeches.

Favre said in October that he did nothing wrong and had been “unjustly smeared “in news coverage of the welfare misspendin­g.

Favre first sought to be dismissed from the state's civil lawsuit in November. The state revised its demand against him in December.

His attorneys filed papers in February, again asking a judge to dismiss Favre from the case.

His latest attempt to get out of the lawsuit came a day after he filed three defamation lawsuits against the auditor White and two former NFL players, Pat Mcafee and Shannon Sharpe, who have sharply criticized Favre in their roles as national sportscast­ers. White, Mcafee and Sharpe had not filed court papers to respond by Friday, records show.

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