The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Goodell pressured by Congress to release Washington report

- By Ben Nuckols

Former Washington Commanders employees and members of Congress pressured the NFL and Commission­er Roger Goodell on Thursday to release a report about the team’s history of sexual harassment and its sexist, hostile workplace culture. They said the team and owner Dan Snyder have not been held accountabl­e for their misdeeds.

One of the six former employees who spoke before the House Committee on Oversight and Reform also came forward with a new allegation that she was sexually harassed by Snyder himself, which Snyder denied.

Complaints about the team’s treatment of female employees first surfaced in 2020. Snyder commission­ed an investigat­ion into the team’s workplace environmen­t that was taken over by the NFL. The probe by attorney Beth Wilkinson’s firm led the league to fine Washington $10 million, and Snyder temporaril­y ceded day-to-day operations of the team to his wife, Tanya.

But the league did not release any details of the Wilkinson investigat­ion’s findings, and former employees who spoke Thursday noted the contrast to the way the NFL handled an investigat­ion into allegation­s that quarterbac­k Tom Brady deflated footballs.

“When the investigat­ion of the air pressure of Tom

Brady’s football concludes with a 200-plus-page report, but the investigat­ion into two decades of sexual harassment concludes with nothing, it shows the NFL’s complete lack of respect towards women, their employees and for the culture of our country,” said Emily Applegate, who worked in the team’s marketing department and said she was sexually harassed daily by her direct superior.

In 2020, in the wake of the killing of George Floyd and widespread protests about systemic racism, the team dropped its longtime name “Redskins” amid pressure from sponsors to get rid of a moniker that was criticized for decades for being offensive to Native Americans. The franchise was known as the Washington Football Team until Wednesday, when Snyder announced its new name, the Commanders.

“Just yesterday, Mr. Snyder tried to rebrand his team as the Commanders. With due respect, it’s going to take more than a name change to fix that broken culture,” said Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., the committee chairwoman.

Tiffani Johnston, who worked for the team for eight years starting in 2002 as a cheerleade­r and marketing manager, told the committee on Thursday that Snyder placed his hand on her thigh without her consent at a team dinner, and that he pushed her toward his limousine with his hand on her lower back. She had not previously disclosed those allegation­s to the media or investigat­ors.

“He left his hand on the middle of my thigh until I physically removed it,” Johnston said.

Describing the incident outside Snyder’s limousine, she said: “The only reason Dan Snyder removed his hand from my back and stopped pushing me towards his limo was because his attorney intervened and said, ‘Dan, Dan, this is a bad idea.’ ... I learned that I should remove myself from Dan’s grip while his attorney was distractin­g him.”

Maloney read from a letter by another former team employee, Jason Friedman, corroborat­ing Johnston’s account. In a statement released by the Commanders, Snyder denied Johnston’s allegation­s.

“While past conduct at the team was unacceptab­le, the allegation­s leveled against me personally in today’s roundtable — many of which are well over 13 years old — are outright lies,” Snyder said. “I unequivoca­lly deny having participat­ed in any such conduct, at any time and with respect to any person.”

Among the allegation­s repeated at Thursday’s roundtable discussion: that women working for the team were repeatedly subjected to unwanted touching and crude comments; that cheerleade­rs were ogled by team executives and clients and fired by Snyder because of their looks; and that the team’s video production department, at

Snyder’s behest, secretly edited an explicit video of cheerleade­rs using surreptiti­ous footage from a calendar shoot.

It was unclear whether pressure from Congress would prompt Goodell, who has cited former employees’ privacy for not releasing the report of the investigat­ion, to change his mind or take further action against Snyder or the team. A league spokesman did not immediatel­y respond to an email seeking comment.

Congressio­nal Republican­s said it was outside the scope of the committee to push a legislativ­e solution to the team’s treatment of employees and said the roundtable was a distractio­n from more urgent issues.

“The witnesses here have begged for us to do something, and nothing is going to happen as a result of this committee,” said Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C. “That’s cruel to these people.”

Asked about the scrutiny from Congress by philanthro­pist David Rubenstein during an appearance at the Economic Club of Washington, Commanders President Jason Wright said the team’s workplace problems occurred before his arrival. Wright is the only Black team president in the NFL and highlighte­d the diversity of the staff he has built.

“The period of this rebrand and the time we’ve been here has coincided with a period of very fast, very deep and irreversib­le change within the organizati­on,” Wright said.

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