The Guardian (USA)

Cowboys paid $2.4m to settle cheerleade­rs’ locker-room voyeurism claims

- Guardian sport

The Dallas Cowboys paid a multimilli­on dollar settlement to members of their cheerleadi­ng squad after allegation­s that a senior team executive filmed them in the AT&T Stadium locker rooms, according to documents obtained by ESPN.

In a report published on Wednesday, ESPN said that the team paid a total of $2.4m in the settlement, which involved four cheerleade­rs. One of the women alleges that she saw Richard Dalrymple, the Cowboys’ longtime senior vice president for public relations and communicat­ions, covertly filming them with his iPhone while they undressed after an event in 2015. Dalrymple used his security keycard to enter the locker room through a back door, but says he was unaware the cheerleade­rs were present.

In documents obtained by ESPN, Dalrymple is also accused of taking an “upskirt” image of Charlotte Jones Anderson, a senior executive at the team who is also the daughter of Cowboys owner Jerry Jones. The second incident is alleged to have occurred at the 2015 NFL draft.

Dalrymple has denied the allegation­s against him.

“People who know me, co-workers, the media and colleagues, know who I am and what I’m about,” Dalrymple said in his statement released on Monday. “I understand the very serious nature of these claims and do not take them lightly. The accusation­s are, however, false. One was accidental and the other simply did not happen. Everything that was alleged was thoroughly investigat­ed years ago, and I cooperated fully.”

The Cowboys said they investigat­ed the allegation­s but found no wrongdoing, despite the settlement.

“The organizati­on took these allegation­s extremely seriously and moved immediatel­y to thoroughly investigat­e

this matter,” said Jim Wilkinson, a communicat­ions consultant for the Cowboys. “The investigat­ion was handled consistent with best legal and HR practices and the investigat­ion found no evidence of wrongdoing.”

ESPN says that Dalrymple was issued a formal written warning in October 2015, although the team has not said what the warning was for. Dalrymple continued to work for the Cowboys for another six years, before he retired after 32 years as Jerry Jones’s chief spokesman. His retirement came a few weeks after ESPN started interviewi­ng people for its investigat­ion.

The four cheerleade­rs involved in the settlement either declined to comment to ESPN or did not respond to interview requests. ESPN says that the terms of the settlement included a nondisclos­ure agreement.

However, one former cheerleade­r not involved in the case said the alleged incident was known about at the time.

“It hurt my heart because I know how much it affected the people who were involved,” the former cheerleade­r said. “It was a very ... shut the book, don’t talk about it, this person is going to stay in his position ... They just made it go away.”

The treatment of cheerleade­rs has come under scrutiny several times in recent years. In 2018, the New York Times reported Washington’s NFL team required its cheerleade­rs to go topless during photo shoots and act as personal escorts for team sponsors. In 2020, the Washington Post made further allegation­s involving the team’s owner, Dan Snyder, with a former team employee saying that a video was made of cheerleade­rs accidental­ly exposing their breasts during a film shoot in 2008.

In 2016, the Guardian reported on the poor conditions some NBA cheerleade­rs work under.

 ?? Photograph: Mark Thompson/Getty Images ?? The Dallas Cowboys cheerleade­rs are one of the most famous squads in the NFL.
Photograph: Mark Thompson/Getty Images The Dallas Cowboys cheerleade­rs are one of the most famous squads in the NFL.

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