Yuma Sun

Legal experts split on if NFL can punish for anthem protests

First Amendment lawsuits could be in play if they punish players for protests

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WASHINGTON — Jerry Jones may want to bench Dallas Cowboy players who don’t stand for the national anthem, but NFL owners could find themselves facing a First Amendment lawsuit if they punish football players or coaches for their protests after taking government money into the private business of profession­al football.

The NFL is a private business — and the First Amendment only protects Americans from free speech abuses from the government. But legal experts differ on whether pro teams who play in publiclyfu­nded stadiums or who accepted government money in exchange for patriotic displays like the national anthem could find themselves legally exposed if they punish kneeling players.

The money exchanged between government­s and pro football teams could mean that discipline enforced by the team could be “fairly attributed to a government entity, meaning the employer could not discipline someone for taking a political position,” Harvard Law School professor Mark Tushnet said.

A judge could find it “relevant that some of the stadiums have been constructe­d with public support and may get continuing public subsidies,” Tushnet said. “It may be relevant that some of these practices were instituted in cooperatio­n with the national military.”

“If the government pays for the patriotic display and the firing is a result of the behavior being deemed insufficie­ntly patriotic, it is conceivabl­e that that a claim could then be articulate­d,” said Floyd Abrams, a First Amendment attorney in New York.

The NFL has been embroiled in controvers­y over players using the national anthem before games as a platform for protest. Former 49ers quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick started the movement last season when he refused to stand during the anthem to protest racial inequality and police brutality. Kaepernick remains unsigned and wants to resume his career, but other NFL players have picked up his cause and kneeled, sat or made other gestures during “The Star Spangled Banner.”

Jones, one of the NFL’s most powerful owners, has said the NFL can’t leave the impression that it tolerates players disrespect­ing the flag and said any Cowboys doing so will not play.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? THE DALLAS COWBOYS, LED BY OWNER JERRY JONES (center), take a knee prior to the national anthem before their game against the Arizona Cardinals on Sept. 25 in Glendale.
ASSOCIATED PRESS THE DALLAS COWBOYS, LED BY OWNER JERRY JONES (center), take a knee prior to the national anthem before their game against the Arizona Cardinals on Sept. 25 in Glendale.
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