National Post

US$1B NFL pool spawns feeding frenzy

- Ken Belson

NEW YORK• The sales pitch es were filled with urgency and emphasized familiarit­y. Act now or risk missing out on millions of dollars. Trust us because we are part of the “NFL brotherhoo­d.” “You have nothing to lose,” a former NFL quarterbac­k implored in one, “but money you’re entitled to and that you earned the hard way.”

The pleadings are aimed at former NFL players who stand to receive cheques from the largest legal settlement in sports history, a pool of money that may top US$1 billion for retirees who sued the league for lying to them about the dangers of concussion­s as they got their heads pounded on the field.

Some players may get very little, but others with severe neurologic­al diseases may receive as much as US$5 million. Now lawyers, lenders and would- be advisers are circling, pitching their services and trying to get a cut of the money.

It may be standard practice for big legal settlement­s, but the fact that many players are cognitivel­y impaired and may struggle to understand the terms of the services offered to them has raised alarm among player advocates, legal ethicists and the lawyers for the players who sued the NFL.

“I’ ve been doing this litigation for a long time; there’s always been a certain amount of stuff going on, but I’ve never seen anything like this by a multiple,” said Christophe­r Seeger, co- lead counsel for the players, who has received dozens of complaints from players and others about companies pitching sometimes dubious services. “There’s a sex appeal to representi­ng NFL players, and they are so identifiab­le, so these companies who are predatory, it is easy for them to be successful. Most of these guys are broke, so they’re vulnerable.”

While some of the firms may provide valuable assistance in complicate­d cases, others appear to be pitching services to ex- players who don’t need their help.

The cottage industry of companies and law firms, going by names such as NFL Case Consulting, Concussion Case Management and Legacy Pro Sports and looking to help people file settlement claims, is largely unregulate­d, even if their pitches are for services that are usually unnecessar­y. And with the deadline to register for the settlement less than a month away, their pitches have become more aggressive.

The rush to recruit players prompted the federal judge overseeing the legal settlement case to issue an order in April saying that NFL Players Brains Matter, a company led by Fred Willis, a former running back, would no longer distribute “improper communicat­ions” to other players.

In an interview, Willis said he was a longtime advocate for players and accepted no money for helping them.

“I’m not being paid, and I don’t need the money,” said Willis, who played for the Bengals, the Oilers and the Broncos. “This is not going to stop me from helping my brothers, and they know where I am coming from.”

The judge, Anita B. Brody, also approved a notice that warned players about companies that, according to Seeger, offer to help players “navigate what are falsely portrayed as complicate­d registrati­on, medical testing and claims procedures.”

Most of the claim-service providers require players to agree to share 15 per cent or more of anything they receive in return for helping them with a process that the providers portray, in stark terms, as unduly complicate­d.

They also do not always tell players that they can call court-appointed experts to receive free advice on how to file a claim, or that they can visit doctors who will provide a free neurologic­al exam.

Some lawyers have hosted dinners for former players at steak houses to get them to sign up. Others have promised to get players appointmen­ts with doctors who will write diagnoses that make their medical conditions look worse than they are, according to players who have received pitches from some of the companies.

Some lawyers have hired former players to sign up their brethren, yet do not always disclose that the ex- players are being paid to recruit other retirees. One firm hired Joe Pisarcik, the former New York Giants quarterbac­k who until re- cently ran the NFL Alumni Associatio­n, as a pitchman. ( Pisarcik did not answer telephone messages left for him.)

Seeger said a few hundred of the approximat­ely 20,000 players who are eligible appeared to have signed up for these services.

But some retirees have resisted the come- ons. Walter Carter, who played defensive end for the Oakland Raiders and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, as well as in the USFL, has heard from at least a dozen companies pitching services.

But Carter, 59, who runs a packaging company near Tampa, Fla., went on the website for the concussion settlement and realized he could file a claim on his own. Although he was annoyed by the lawyers selling services he does not need, Carter is more offended by the retired players who are doing their bidding, including Pisarcik, who pitched him.

“I watch how these attorneys work, and I think it’s a crime,” Carter said. But “most of them penetrate the confidence of guys by working with other guys. It’s the ultimate betrayal.”

Brody left open the possibilit­y of cancelling agreements between these companies and any players they had enlisted.

The NFL declined to make an executive available to discuss the issue.

Concussion Case Management and Legacy Pro Sports, which was started by a former player, said any misleading informatio­n on their websites had been corrected.

The companies say they are advocates for players who have difficulty completing the needed paperwork, and that they charge far less than law firms.

“They want to tell you it’s simple and you don’t need to work with a service company or a lawyer — but when you sit down with the player and tell him to go to this portal, get an ID number, if you’re a retired player with impairment, it’s not necessaril­y an easy process,” said Jerry Passaro, chief executive of Concussion Case Management, which charges players 12.5 per cent of any award from the settlement.

Brandon Siler, a former linebacker and a co-founder of Legacy Pro Sports, another service provider, said: “It hurts my feelings when something is written that we are taking advantage of players. We’re totally transparen­t about what we do. We are a consulting company that is educating these players.”

MOST OF THEM PENETRATE ... BY WORKING WITH OTHER GUYS.

 ?? EVE EDELHEIT FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? “I watch how these attorneys work, and I think it’s a crime,” says former Raider and Buccaneer Walter Carter of lawyers soliciting ex-NFL players who may be in line for a concussion­s settlement.
EVE EDELHEIT FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES “I watch how these attorneys work, and I think it’s a crime,” says former Raider and Buccaneer Walter Carter of lawyers soliciting ex-NFL players who may be in line for a concussion­s settlement.

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