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Post by Zig on Feb 26, 2016 9:14:37 GMT -5
Looks like Rodger's already slim chance just got worse Coyne: Judges appointed a 'good victory' for Brady February 25, 2016, 7:30 pm The names of the three judges who will hear the NFL’s appeal of Judge Berman’s Deflategate ruling were released today, and two of them -- Robert A. Katzmann and Denny Chin -- were appointed by Democratic presidents. Dean of Massachusetts School of Law Michael Coyne says this is “very good news” for Tom Brady. “A liberal court is more likely to favor labor as opposed to management,” said Coyne. “At least two of the judges likely have liberal leanings as respect to that, and the third having been initially appointed by Clinton, may as well. This is a good victory for Brady. It’s still early in the process, but a good victory for Tom here today.” Watch the video above for more analysis. www.csnne.com/new-england-patriots/coyne-judges-appointed-good-victory-brady
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Post by Zig on Feb 26, 2016 9:16:03 GMT -5
Felger: NFL will soon be powerless before Brady February 26, 2016, 8:15 am All the NFL had to do was make a deal. It was there for them and, as usual, they overreached. They bit off more than they could chew, and now they're about to lose a lot more than they bargained for. What's at stake in the Tom Brady appeal hearing is no longer the guilt or innocence of the Patriots quarterback. This is no longer about PSIs, sketchy trips to the bathroom or incriminating text messages. This is about commissioner Roger Goodell's power over the players and the league's precious Article 46. And if Brady prevails in the league's federal appeal -- as became all the more likely with the selection of a three-judge panel yesterday that, on the surface, appears to favor him -- then those powers are in serious jeopardy. If Brady wins, there will be yet another precedent-setting case that diminishes Article 46 and Goodell. And even if the league appeals to the Supreme Court, the damage will be done. It all could have been avoided had the NFL shown some judgment at its own appeal hearing in May, when Brady was willing to take a game suspension in exchange for some language. It should have been an easy call, but the league's overpaid and incompetent legal team felt otherwise. The NFL had already gotten the Pats to accept their punishment. They had their pound of flesh. A game for Brady would have been gravy, there would be no threat of court action, and Article 46 would have been safe and sound. But that wasn't good enough for the geniuses at the NFL. So Judge Berman bent them over the table and embarrassed them. And now it's the turn of the appellate court. www.csnne.com/new-england-patriots/if-nfl-loses%20appeal-in-tom-brady-case-roger-goodells-power-will-be-diminished
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Gronk
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Post by Gronk on Mar 21, 2016 13:46:25 GMT -5
Kraft asked NFL to return first-round pick By Ben Volin GLOBE STAFF MARCH 21, 2016 BOCA RATON, Fla. – The Patriots won’t be getting their first-round draft pick back from the NFL for their involvement in Deflategate.
But that doesn’t mean the Patriots haven’t tried.
Patriots owner Robert Kraft, speaking Monday afternoon at the NFL owners meetings at the Boca Raton Resort, said that he wrote a letter to Roger Goodell about a month ago asking for the league to consider new information and return the Patriots’ lost draft pick. Kraft also implied that he asked Goodell to reconsider Tom Brady’s four-game suspension.
“I personally wrote a letter to the commissioner responding to his comment that if any new facts came up he would take them into consideration,” Kraft said in his first public comments since the start of the 2015 regular season. “And I personally believe that when the league made their decision, they did not factor in the ideal gas law. They admitted that publicly. They’ve had a full year of being able to observe Tom Brady play with all the rules of whatever the NFL was and make any judgments there, and we have laid it out pretty straightforward, and now it’s up to them to decide.”
Kraft also said he was disappointed that the NFL has declined to share any of the data it supposedly collected from its random “spot checks” of footballs last fall. The NFL designed new ball testing and security procedures in the wake of Deflategate, which was supposed to include random PSI testing before, during and after games, but the NFL has declined to release any information, and NFL executive vice president Troy Vincent said last week that the new rules were more about adding increased security around the footballs, not PSI testing.
“They did their own testing, they have results, but for whatever reason they haven’t shared them with any of us,” Kraft said. “And we actually requested that at the beginning of the season, that they test every game throughout the league and do that, but they chose to do it their own way.”
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Gronk
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Post by Gronk on Mar 21, 2016 14:28:52 GMT -5
NFL lying? shocking!
NFL Lawyer Intentionally Misled DeflateGate Judges, New Letter To Court Alleges March 21, 2016 2:16 PM
By Michael Hurley, CBS Boston
BOSTON (CBS) –It’s been reported numerous times since early March that the NFL’s attorney made factually untrue statements to the three-judge panel hearing Tom Brady’s “DeflateGate” case in New York. But now, one legal expert is taking it one step further and saying that the untrue statements were made intentionally.
And he’s telling the judges directly.
New York Law School professor Robert Blecker has taken a keen interest in the case, and his most recent letter to judges Robert Katzmann, Denny Chin and Barrington Parker Jr. minces no words.
“In their brief and at oral argument the NFL made several material misstatements of fact that could mislead this Court in its deliberation,” the letter, dated March 17, begins. “NFL counsel was made aware of at least some of these material misstatements prior to oral argument and yet to the best of my knowledge not only failed to correct them but also made additional factual misstatements.”
To help prove the point, Blecker attached a letter, written in January by Patriots lead counsel Daniel Goldberg. The letter was sent to NFL attorney Paul Clement, in which Goldberg laid out five different instances of the NFL making “significant misstatements” in its brief with the Second Circuit Court of Appeals.
“I am writing to call your attention to some of the misstatements, knowing that you, as an attorney of unquestioned integrity, will want to take such actions as are appropriate in the circumstances,” Goldberg wrote to Clement on Jan. 26. “I am sure you will diligently review these matters. Even a single misrepresentation of the record evidence is something I know you would not countenance.”
Blecker made it clear in his letter to the court that when Clement reiterated some of these untrue statements in front of the judges, the NFL’s attorney violated the ethics of the courtroom.
“As a former teacher of legal ethics who has submitted the amicus brief in NFL vs. Tom Brady, I feel obliged to draw this court’s attention to these false statements,” Blecker wrote.
Blecker later added: “ABA Model Rule 3.3, Candor Toward The Tribunal, declares that ‘a lawyer shall not knowingly make a false statement of fact or law to a tribunal or fail to correct a false statement of material fact or law previously made to the tribunal by the lawyer.’ If a lawyer ‘has offered material evidence and the lawyer comes to know of its falsity, the lawyer shall take reasonable remedial measures, including, if necessary, disclosure to the tribunal.'”
Clement responded to the letter on Monday and has denied making any false statements. As such, Clement did not seek to correct anything he stated either in the brief or at the hearing.
“In sum,” Clement wrote, “Mr. Blecker’s accusations of material misrepresentations and ethical violations have no basis in fact.”
Considering Clement wrote the brief for the NFL and filed it in December before receiving the letter from Goldberg in January, Blecker found it difficult to conclude anything except that Clement knowingly made false statements before the judges on March 3.
“I am hard put to understand how NFL Counsel [Clement] in his brief or at Oral argument before this court did not knowingly make false statements,” Blecker wrote. “In addition to the attached personal communication [the letter from Goldberg to Clement], recent columns by Sally Jenkins in The Washington Post and Mike McCann in Sports Illustrated have extensively focused on NFL counsel’s factual misstatements.”
In particular, Blecker notes the following misstatements of fact:
–The NFL argued that multiple text messages throughout the 2014 season included mentions of Jim McNally as the “Deflator.” In fact, just one message from May 2014 ever used that word.
–The NFL argued that Brady’s counsel was present for “many of the interviews” conducted by Wells’ team. In fact, “Brady’s lawyers were present only at Brady’s interview.”
–The NFL argued that 11 of the Patriots’ footballs measured below the allowable limit and that all of the Colts’ footballs tested within the allowable range on at least one pressure gauge. The argument, Blecker claims, is disingenuous, because it doesn’t account for the crucial element of timing. An independent AEI study thoroughly addressed that major issue last June.
–The NFL continued to claim at the March 3 hearing that Brady testified that his increased communication with John Jastremski centered only around preparation of footballs for the Super Bowl. As (full disclosure) I noted shortly after the hearing, this was simply not true. Brady testified numerous times to discussing the allegations being made in the media about potentially deflated footballs. Blecker concluded that it remains Clement’s duty to “correct false statements.”
Clement, however, disagreed entirely with Blecker’s claims.
“Mr. Blecker’s letter is both procedural improper and wholly unfounded,” Clement wrote. “Post-argument letters quoting media articles and leveling unfounded ethical allegations play no proper part in [the] process and should have no bearing on the resolution of this appeal.”
Clement sought to address the charges one-by-one, and how successfully he did that will be up for the judges to decide. Clement also issued somewhat of a challenge to Blecker’s own candor.
“Mr. Blecker’s own duty of candor might be thought to include the need to disclose that the highly unusual ‘Personal & Confidential’ letter that somehow came into his possession was not from some disinterested observer, but from the New England Patriots’ outside counsel,” Clement wrote.
Blecker’s listing of misstatements was similar to the ones noted by Goldberg in his December letter to Clement. Goldberg’s letter, however, included the NFL distorting the context of the texts between McNally and Jastremski, the NFL minimizing league counsel Jeff Pash’s role in the final editing of the Wells report, and the NFL overstating Brady’s role in the 2006 rule change for preparing footballs.
Those who have closely followed the ongoing “DeflateGate” saga know Blecker first from his personal blog post, “DeflateGate: The Smoking Gun,” written last August, in which he displayed a clear act of deception by Exponent in the Wells report. In September, he appeared on “60 Minutes Sports,” and he laid out the many reasons why the Wells report and NFL investigation was deeply flawed. And in December, he filed an amicus curiae brief, in which he harshly criticized the NFL’s investigation as “biased, dishonest and fundamentally unfair.” He even went so far as to say the NFL’s actions were “infected with bias, unfairness, evident partiality and occasional fraud.”
So, after seeing Clement blatantly disregard the facts of the case when arguing before the three appellate judges, Blecker felt compelled to write this letter.
The letter concludes with an important admission from Blecker himself.
“Let me note my own no-longer-true statement in material cited in the amicus brief, which included me among those who detest the Patriots,” Blecker wrote. “Witnessing the repeated, continuing unjustified abuse and distortion heaped upon the team by the NFL and an un(der)informed public has created in my a deep ambivalence. Thus no longer do I wish for Brady’s on-field defeat but this Court should still consider me an honest neutral observer, concerned about the integrity of the sport.”
A one-time “Patriots hater” converted? That may be the most unbelievable development yet in this 15-month saga, yet it speaks to the ongoing misconduct demonstrated by the NFL and its representatives.
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Gronk
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Post by Gronk on Mar 23, 2016 13:34:34 GMT -5
Kraft asked NFL to return first-round pickBy Ben Volin GLOBE STAFF MARCH 21, 2016 BOCA RATON, Fla. – The Patriots won’t be getting their first-round draft pick back from the NFL for their involvement in Deflategate. But that doesn’t mean the Patriots haven’t tried. Patriots owner Robert Kraft, speaking Monday afternoon at the NFL owners meetings at the Boca Raton Resort, said that he wrote a letter to Roger Goodell about a month ago asking for the league to consider new information and return the Patriots’ lost draft pick. Kraft also implied that he asked Goodell to reconsider Tom Brady’s four-game suspension. “I personally wrote a letter to the commissioner responding to his comment that if any new facts came up he would take them into consideration,” Kraft said in his first public comments since the start of the 2015 regular season. “And I personally believe that when the league made their decision, they did not factor in the ideal gas law. They admitted that publicly. They’ve had a full year of being able to observe Tom Brady play with all the rules of whatever the NFL was and make any judgments there, and we have laid it out pretty straightforward, and now it’s up to them to decide.” Kraft also said he was disappointed that the NFL has declined to share any of the data it supposedly collected from its random “spot checks” of footballs last fall. The NFL designed new ball testing and security procedures in the wake of Deflategate, which was supposed to include random PSI testing before, during and after games, but the NFL has declined to release any information, and NFL executive vice president Troy Vincent said last week that the new rules were more about adding increased security around the footballs, not PSI testing. “They did their own testing, they have results, but for whatever reason they haven’t shared them with any of us,” Kraft said. “And we actually requested that at the beginning of the season, that they test every game throughout the league and do that, but they chose to do it their own way.” They said No lol Goodell: Patriots won’t get their picks back March 23, 2016, 11:15 am Roger Goodell read Robert Kraft's letter, but he didn't find anything in it that motivated him to alter the Deflategate discipline he handed down. In a press conference at the NFL Annual Meeting in Boca Raton, Fla., Goodell was asked about Kraft's letter, which asked the NFL to return the team's 2016 first-round draft pick. Goodell acknowledged that he received the letter, and he explained that he "considered" it. He explained that he did not, however, find any new information in the letter that suggested the discipline should be changed. "I did receive letter from Robert a few weeks back. I also responded to him two weeks ago and told him that I had considered his views," Goodell said. "I didn't think there was any new information in there that would cause us to alter the discipline and so there will be no change to the discipline." After Kraft spoke to reporters earlier this week, it was relatively clear that Goodell was not open to returning to the Patriots their first-rounder in 2016 or their fourth-rounder in 2017. Wednesday's comments cemented the decision. Goodell was also asked about the chances of the NFL and the NFLPA settling out of court on the appeal of Judge Richard Berman's decision as it related to quarterback Tom Brady's four-game suspension. "I'm not aware of that," Goodell said. On Tuesday, Patriots president Jonathan Kraft spoke to Patriots Insider Tom E. Curran to relay how the Kraft family has felt throughout the disciplinary process.
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Gronk
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Post by Gronk on Mar 24, 2016 14:28:31 GMT -5
not sure if legit but I wouldn't doubt it! NFL Owners Admit DeflateGate Was All About Nailing Patriots Owner Robert KraftBy Rich Hill @pp_Rich_Hill on Mar 24, 2016, New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady is a mere casualty of owner squabbles, because there's nothing like a bunch of billionaires picking a fight that leaves the little guy dealing with the repercussions. Well, maybe Brady's not a little guy, but he's certainly not the focus of the owners when it comes to DeflateGate penalties. Per Sirius XM host Chris Russo, who spoke with nine team owners, the 4-game suspension of Brady was a drop in the bucket compared to the $1 million, 2016 1st and 2017 4th round pick levied from team owner Robert Kraft. "'Do you think we want Goodell to suspend the best player in the league?,'" Russo told WEEI's Kirk Minihane about the owners' justification for pursuing vengeance. "'Its star? For the first four games of the regular season, which includes a game against the Cowboys and the first opening Thursday night game of the year? "‘We got Kraft. We don't like Kraft. We got him already. We nailed him for a million dollars, and he lost a first-round pick and a fourth-round pick. And we made sure that Kraft did not appeal it because we all bombarded him at the owners' meetings and said ‘Bob, you've got no support here. Do what you have to do. You have no support. Nobody is going to back you up.'" more: www.patspulpit.com/2016/3/24/11297062/nfl-owners-admit-deflategate-was-all-about-nailing-patriots-owner
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Post by redseat on Mar 24, 2016 15:38:04 GMT -5
I'm not surprised at all. The League and owners hate Kraft
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Post by NEW YORK on Apr 6, 2016 8:59:37 GMT -5
Patriots fans sue NFL over lost ‘Deflategate’ draft pick
BOSTON — Seven New England Patriots fans sued the National Football League on Tuesday, asking a judge to reverse a decision by the league to strip the team of a first-round pick in this month’s draft over allegations of underinflated footballs.
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OXlodge
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Post by OXlodge on Apr 6, 2016 9:06:41 GMT -5
"I'm suing the NFL because for over a year now, I haven't been able to sleep at night. We earned those draft picks, and we want them back NOW"!!! Attachments:
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