The Commercial Appeal

Watson inquiry a tough test for NFL

- Brent Schrotenbo­er

The NFL never has investigat­ed a case quite like Deshaun Watson’s.

Other NFL player conduct investigat­ions typically have involved only a small number of incidents at most. By contrast, 22 women have sued Watson, accusing him of sexual misconduct during massage sessions in four states.

That gives the league 22 cases to consider with the Houston Texans quarterbac­k, who could be suspended based on the findings, regardless of whether he is charged with a crime after a separate investigat­ion by the Houston police.

“It only takes one case to justify discipline,” said the NFL’S former counsel for operations and litigation, Jodi Balsam, now an associate professor at Brooklyn Law School. “So even if they can come to no determinat­ion after 20 cases, but in one case it’s a clear episode of some form of sexual assault or harassment, that’s enough for them to impose discipline. They don’t have to resolve every single factual dispute in every single case to justify discipline.”

So then which cases are the most problemati­c for him?

Two of the 22 lawsuits appear to be more serious than the others because they accuse him of sexual assault.

Another case stands out because of its timing.

The latter happened on March 5, according to a lawsuit filed by a massage therapist in Georgia. It could make Watson look really bad or really innocent, depending on the viewpoint, which raises another issue about the scale of the league’s investigat­ion: Even if a case is not damning on its own, any could provide clues that add to the pile of evidence for or against his culpabilit­y.

In the March 5 case, the massage therapist’s encounter is the most recent alleged incident described in the 22 lawsuits against Watson, with most of the rest accusing him of misconduct in 2020, allegation­s Watson has denied.

It also is the only one that came at a sensitive period in the timeline of cases. This was 11 days before the first woman went public with a lawsuit March 16, but just weeks after Watson was put on notice that he should not be in the habit of cruising for massages with strangers on social media.

‘Extremely reckless’: Watson effectively was warned by his own sports agency, Athletes First, after another therapist in Texas, Ashley Solis, had attempted in February to resolve her own misconduct claim against Watson privately through attorneys out of court.

Before that, in mid-january, another woman spoke with Watson’s marketing manager at Athletes First and asked for a settlement to keep quiet about her own encounter with Watson, according to the marketing manager, Bryan Burney.

Those attempts failed, and Watson then contacted the therapist in Georgia for a discounted $55 massage on Instagram in early March, according to her lawsuit. Watson’s attorney acknowledg­ed in a court filing that Watson contacted the woman this way to “hire her for a massage.”

That can mean one of two things, according to the attorneys on each side:

Either the NFL star disregarde­d a warning about his behavior to continue a pattern of sexual misconduct, according to plaintiffs’ attorney Tony Buzbee, who represents all 22 women. Or the therapist in Georgia is lying about what happened to get money from him, just like the other 21 women, according to Watson’s attorney, Rusty Hardin. The women seek compensato­ry damages in their lawsuits.

“For him to resume this pattern of behavior after litigation was pending, after a warning from his own support network … that pattern of behavior is at a minimum reckless,” Balsam told USA TODAY Sports, referring to Watson’s pattern of contacting strangers on social media for massages. “It also possibly indicates some kind of addictive or compulsive behavior here.”

Watson’s attorneys said Watson contacted massage therapists this way for various reasons: because that’s where they advertised – on Instagram – and because of his busy schedule and changes to it during the COVID-19 pandemic.

(USA TODAY Sports is identifyin­g Solis because she has publicly addressed the allegation­s. Otherwise USA TODAY Sports does not name individual­s who allege sexual crimes without their permission.)

In April, the agency that represents Watson referenced the settlement discussion­s with Solis in February.

“We believed then – and fully believe now – that Deshaun learned a lesson about putting himself in this type of situation by interactin­g with people he does not know,” said a statement released April 6 by Scott Gaffield, the general counsel of Athletes First.

So then why would he contact another massage therapist he didn’t know in

Georgia weeks later?

Interactin­g with strangers online: Two women made settlement demands of Watson before March, according to Athletes First. The first did so in midjanuary, when Burney spoke to the woman who was asking to be paid $30,000 in exchange for her “indefinite silence” about her alleged encounter with Watson, according to a written declaratio­n from Burney released by Watson’s legal team March 23. But what exactly she wished to settle “was not clear to me,” Burney wrote.

Burney also wrote that the woman “confirmed that everything that occurred was consensual during her encounter with Deshaun.” Burney said a man purporting to be the women’s business manager then said the request is “not extortion. It’s blackmail.”

“I informed this individual that Deshaun would not be paying the $30,000 requested,” Burney wrote.

Watson’s legal team since has identified the woman as a massage therapist who said Watson contacted her on Instagram in December. The woman filed a lawsuit against Watson March 17 and is one of the two plaintiffs who accuse him of sexual assault.

The other woman who made a claim against Watson before March was Solis. She said Watson exposed himself to her and caused her to touch his genitals during a massage after he contacted her on Instagram in March 2020. She pressed her claim privately in February after hiring Buzbee, who said she was his only client at the time.

On her behalf, Buzbee’s firm engaged with Athletes First and demanded $100,000 from Watson to resolve Solis’ complaint and prevent her from going public with a lawsuit.

In response, Gaffield said he didn’t believe Solis’ claim and rejected that figure but said he was open to paying Solis a “reasonable settlement figure because we believe he can learn a lesson about having put himself in this situation,” according to e-mails from February released by Watson’s legal team.

Yet this “lesson” apparently then went unheeded by Watson. On March 3, Watson sent the massage therapist in Georgia a message via Instagram to express his interest in the $55 discounted massage, according to her lawsuit. They met on March 5, when she said Watson exposed himself to her and caused her to touch his genitals – a descriptio­n of events that matches those of Solis and many other plaintiffs.

By itself, seeking massages from strangers on social media wouldn’t justify discipline, even after being warned about the risks involved as a celebrity athlete. But even if he did nothing wrong, and this is all a money grab, Watson apparently willingly walked into it again with another stranger from Instagram, despite the “lesson” in February.

How the NFL interprets the competing narratives is one piece of a process that could drag into 2022.

 ?? QUINN HARRIS/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Texans quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson warms up before a game against the Bears on Dec. 13.
QUINN HARRIS/USA TODAY SPORTS Texans quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson warms up before a game against the Bears on Dec. 13.

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