New York Daily News

Cheer gals rip team’s sleaze tour

- BY ZACH RIPPLE

WASHINGTON FOOTBALL cheerleade­rs said they felt the team was “pimping them out” during corporate events and treated them like “sex symbols to please male sponsors,” according to a report.

During a 2013 Costa Rica team calendar trip, cheerleade­rs told The New York Times they were forced to be escorts, as well as on a 2012 private boat party where men “shot liquor into the cheerleade­rs’ mouths with turkey basters” and “handed out cash prizes in twerking contests.”

Five anonymous cheerleade­rs who were involved in the Costa Rica trip say that sex and inappropri­ate touching were not involved, according to the newspaper.

However, for the photo shoot at the adultsonly Occidental Grand Papagayo resort on Culebra Bay, some cheerleade­rs said they were forced to go topless or wear nothing but body paint. And while the resort was secluded, the organizati­on had invited “a contingent of sponsors and FedExField suite holders — all men” for “up-close access to the photo shoots.”

Following one of the days, which included 14 hours of posing and dance practices, the squad director told nine of the 36 cheerleade­rs that they were to be personal dates for some of the men at a nightclub.

“They weren’t putting a gun to our heads, but it was mandatory for us to go,” one of the cheerleade­rs said, according to the report. “We weren’t asked, we were told.”

While their participat­ion did not involve sex, several cheerleade­rs felt like the ordeal amounted to nothing more than “pimping us out,” being forced to “go as sex symbols to please male sponsors, which they did not believe should be a part of their job.”

“It’s just not right to send cheerleade­rs out with strange men when some of the girls clearly don’t want to go,” one cheerleade­r who was there said. The organizati­on also defended their handling of cheerleade­rs.

“Each (Washington) cheerleade­r is contractua­lly protected to ensure a safe and constructi­ve environmen­t. The work our cheerleade­rs do in our community, visiting our troops abroad, and supporting our team on the field is something the (Washington) organizati­on and our fans take great pride in,” the team said in a statement.

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