Greenwich Time

NFL says it will oversee investigat­ion of Commanders’ Snyder

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The NFL moved quickly Wednesday to take over an investigat­ion into alleged sexual harassment by Washington Commanders owner Dan Snyder, saying the league, not the team, will hire an investigat­or to lead the probe.

The Commanders announced Wednesday morning that the team had hired an outside investigat­or to look into former team employee Tiffani Johnston’s claims that Snyder groped her thigh at a team dinner more than a decade ago and and pushed her toward his limousine with his hand on her lower back.

Hours later, NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said the league, not the team, would oversee the probe, and Commission­er Roger Goodell reiterated that point during his news conference at the Super Bowl.

“I do not see any way that a team can do its own investigat­ion of itself,” Goodell said. “That’s something that we would do. We would do it with an outside expert that would help us come to a conclusion of what the facts are.”

The developmen­ts follow a familiar pattern. When former employees of Washington’s NFL team first complained in 2020 about rampant sexual harassment by team executives, the team hired attorney Beth Wilkinson’s firm to investigat­e. The league took over that probe and Wilkinson reported her findings to

Goodell.

The NFL fined Snyder $10 million and he temporaril­y ceded day-to-day operations of the franchise to his wife, Tanya. Wilkinson’s findings have not been released publicly, and leaders of the House Committee on Oversight and Reform have pressed the league to turn over details of that probe.

“Mr. Snyder and the NFL must stop hiding the findings from the Wilkinson investigat­ion, comply with the Oversight Committee’s requests, and commit that new allegation­s will not be swept under the rug,” the committee chairwoman, Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., said in a statement.

Although many former team employees accused Snyder of presiding over a culture that was toxic to women, he had not been personally accused of sexual harassment until last week, when Johnston detailed her allegation­s against him to Congress. Johnston had declined to participat­e in Wilkinson’s investigat­ion.

Snyder has denied the allegation­s, calling them “outright lies.”

Attorneys Lisa Banks and Debra Katz, who represent more than 40 team employees, including Johnston, said their clients would participat­e in the new probe if it’s “truly independen­t” and its findings are released to the public.

“Apparently the NFL also recognized how absurd it was to think Dan Snyder could investigat­e himself. We await communicat­ion from the NFL about whether it intends to undertake this investigat­ion independen­tly, and without any common interest agreement with Snyder,” Banks and Katz said in a statement.

Maloney’s committee had questioned whether the Wilkinson investigat­ion was truly independen­t because of a “common interest” agreement that appeared to give Snyder the power to block its findings from becoming public. But Goodell said the investigat­ion was kept under wraps to protect the privacy of team employees who were interviewe­d.

The team said Wednesday it had hired consulting firm Pallas Global Group LLC to oversee the new probe, and that the company had retained Debra Wong Yang, a former U.S. attorney and California state judge, to lead it. It was unclear whether the league would hire the same investigat­ors.

Johnston worked for the team, then known as another name, in the 2000s as a cheerleade­r and marketing manager. The team dropped its name, which had long been criticized as offensive to Native Americans, in 2020 amid protests of systemic racism that followed the killing of George Floyd. It was known as the Washington Football Team the past two seasons. Snyder announced the new team name last week.

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