USA TODAY US Edition

Report: Female employees harassed

- Tom Schad

Fifteen former female employees of Washington’s NFL team told The Washington Post they were sexually harassed while working for the club, according to a story Thursday.

The allegation­s span from 2006 to 2019, according to the newspaper, and range from inappropri­ate remarks about female employees’ bodies or clothing to instances of verbal abuse.

Several of the allegation­s outlined by The Washington Post involve men who occupied prominent roles in the organizati­on, three of whom left in the past week.

Alex Santos and Richard Mann II, longtime members of the team’s personnel department, were fired over the weekend, according to multiple reports. Larry Michael, the team’s longtime radio voice, abruptly announced his retirement Wednesday after 16 seasons with the club.

The franchise has retained a D.C.based law firm, Wilkinson Walsh, to review the matter, according to attorney Beth Wilkinson. She confirmed in an email to USA TODAY earlier Thursday her firm will be reviewing “the team’s culture, policies and allegation­s of workplace misconduct.” ESPN first reported the firm’s hiring.

“The Washington Redskins football team takes issues of employee conduct seriously,” the team said in a statement provided to The Post. “While we do not speak to specific employee situations publicly, when new allegation­s of conduct are brought forward that are contrary to these policies, we address them promptly.”

An NFL spokespers­on did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment from USA TODAY.

The paper also details allegation­s against Santos from female reporters Rhiannon Walker of The Athletic and Nora Princiotti, who now works for The Ringer but previously worked for The Washington Times.

Thursday’s report comes less than one week after pressure from major corporate sponsors led Washington to announce it would be dropping its team name, which many had long viewed as a racial slur. It also follows several months of transition at the top levels of the franchise.

After firing coach Jay Gruden midway through last season, Washington also ousted head athletic trainer Larry Hess and longtime team president and general manager Bruce Allen, who had long been team owner Dan Snyder’s right-hand man.

Former Panthers coach Ron Rivera was hired to replace Gruden, and Ryan Vermillion, who previously worked with Rivera in Carolina, replaced Hess.

Snyder was not directly implicated with any wrongdoing in The Post’s report. However, many of those interviewe­d expressed skepticism that he was unaware of inappropri­ate behavior while also citing the team’s lack of a robust human resources department as an issue.

 ??  ?? Snyder
Snyder

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States