Stephen A. Smith suggests Mecole Hardman could sue Jets over recent allegations

Stephen A. Smith said that #Chiefs WR Mecole Hardman could sue the #Jets over recent allegations made by New York’s players.

The Kansas City Chiefs are no strangers to controversy, but the most recent allegations about Super Bowl LVIII hero Mecole Hardman have taken it to new heights.

Hardman has come under fire after New York Jets players implied he leaked the team’s game plans to opponents.

While these allegations haven’t been proved, Hardman is now under a microscope due to the war of words.

ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith told his co-hosts on “First Take” this morning that, if the claims are proven to be untrue, Hardman may have grounds to take legal action.

Check out Smith’s take on the matter below:

The drama surrounding these accusations isn’t likely to end soon and may spill over into the spring and summer if Hardman decides to take action.

Whether this incident ends in a legal battle or not, one thing is clear: The Chiefs have a massive target on their backs and will need to tread lightly to avoid any further offseason excitement in the media.

Court motion offers graphic details in Michael Irvin case, video to be made public

The Marriott employee’s story details aggressive flirting and a lewd proposition from the Hall of Fame WR; a judge ruled on the video. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Marriott has finally revealed details regarding the early February incident involving former Cowboys wide receiver Michael Irvin in Phoenix. A court motion now filed by the hotel chain gives a version of events that’s very different from the story told by Irvin and multiple witnesses.

Those details come as a federal judge says the company “blatantly” violated an order to provide Irvin with video recordings of the incident in question. In response to an emergency motion filed by Irvin’s legal team, the judge is allowing the video to be released publicly.

The Marriott motion, according to Michael Gehlken of the Dallas Morning News, describes an encounter with a female employee that was initiated by a “visibly intoxicated” Irvin and quickly escalated into aggressive flirtation, unwanted physical contact, and a graphic proposition from the Hall of Famer.

Irvin filed a lawsuit against Marriott and the woman seeking $100 million in damages after he was sent home from his job covering Super Bowl LVII for NFL Network.

As per the new court filing, written by a Marriott attorney, Irvin “flagged down” the woman in the lobby’s bar area as she was working, asked about her job, told her that he found her attractive, and introduced himself. The woman explained that she was not an NFL fan and didn’t know who Irvin was; Irvin reportedly told her to look him up on the internet.

During this initial exchange, Irvin shook the woman’s hand and also touched her arm “without her consent, causing her to step back, becoming visibly uncomfortable.”

It’s then that Irvin allegedly made the most disturbing accusation contained in the motion document.

Irvin “asked the Victim whether she knew anything about having a ‘big Black man inside of [her],'” per the court motion. “Taken aback by Irvin’s comments, the Victim responded that his comments were inappropriate, and she did not wish to discuss it further.”

“Irvin then attempted to grab the Victim’s hand again and said he was ‘sorry if he brought up bad memories’ for her,” the motion continues. “The Victim pulled her hand away and tried to back away from Irvin as he continued to move towards her.”

Two hotel workers apparently approached in an attempt to intervene, at which point Irvin closed the encounter with another handshake, which the Marriott legal team says the woman returned, “wanting the interaction to end.”

The former Cowboys star allegedly “stated that he would come back to find [the woman] sometime that week when she was working.” He also allegedly “leered” at the woman as she walked away and made suggestive comments overheard by another hotel employee, saying “She bad,” and “I want to hit that.”

Irvin has denied that anything inappropriate took place and explained this week that he had not seen the hotel’s video or even been informed of the exact nature of the woman’s complaints. He has admitted, however, that he had been out drinking earlier in the evening and did not recall the exact nature of his brief conversation with the woman.

This week, though, Irvin compared the accusations to a modern-day lynching. Earlier in the week, two men whom the three-time Super Bowl champ had just met said that they witnessed the entire exchange and saw nothing about the conversation or the woman’s body language that caused any sort of concern at the time.

Irvin’s attorney fired back at the new detailed allegations Friday.

“Total hogwash,” Levi McCathern said in a statement to Dallas Morning News. “Marriott’s recently created account goes against all the eyewitnesses and Michael’s own testimony as well as common sense. We will release the video next week. There is no sexual assault. The fact Marriott is taking the position that it is is an insult to all of the true female victims out there.”

“I was shocked by Marriott’s prior handling of this situation,” McCathern went on. “I am now disgusted and appalled. I wish trial was tomorrow, so Michael could clear his name and get the compensation he deserves for Marriott’s reckless disregard for the truth.”

The woman reportedly shared her version of events with a coworker that same evening and then told her supervisor about the incident the next morning.

The hotel reported the incident to the NFL, following guidelines that had been established just the day prior regarding any league employees staying at the hotel. No criminal complaint was ever received by local police about the matter.

Prior to Friday’s ruling by U.S. District Judge Amos Mazzant, only McCathern had seen the hotel’s video footage, which blurred out the woman’s face. The judge was not pleased with the hotel chain deciding to place its own conditions on who could view the footage and how.

“It seems like Marriott just looked at my order and didn’t want to produce the video,” Mazzant said.

The judge has now ordered the video to be produced “without modification.”

Irvin’s lawyer says that video’s public release will be the key to exonerating the NFL legend.

“Everybody who views [the video] will see what I’ve seen and what the witnesses who were there have seen,” McCathern said. “Michael didn’t do anything wrong.”

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Opinion: Saints trading for Deshaun Watson would not be worth celebrating

The Saints trading for Deshaun Watson would not be worth celebrating. At best, the allegations against him could be spun as a distraction the team can’t afford:

NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport and Tom Pelissero set off a social media frenzy Sunday morning by reporting the New Orleans Saints have submitted a trade offer for Houston Texans quarterback Deshaun Watson, with a meeting expected to occur soon in which Watson will choose whether to waive his no-trade clause for New Orleans. Landing a top-five quarterback in the prime of his playing career would be a coup for the Saints, but Watson brings so much serious baggage that it shouldn’t have gotten to this point.

Critics love to say that a team can’t sign Colin Kaepernick because of the distraction his social activism would bring, or that Tim Tebow didn’t get a fair shake (he got several, actually) because of the circus that follows him everywhere. Watson has been credibly accused of a years-long predatory pattern of behavior by 22 different women all describing the same events. That wasn’t enough for the courts to criminally charge him. But it’s a situation the American criminal justice system isn’t built to resolve, with only a fraction of those accused of sexual assault ever actually seeing jailtime. A lack of physical evidence with which to levy criminal charges doesn’t signify innocence no matter how much Watson and his agent are trying to tell people it does.

There have been a lot of snide remarks asking why it’s important to take a moral stand on this right now. It’s because we risk letting the allegations against Watson be glossed over by a long and successful career, just like happened with Ben Roethlisberger and Kobe Bryant and Chauncey Billups. The gravity of the misconduct Watson is accused of demands we speak out against it now, six months from now, and six years from now. Downplaying it or ignoring it because he’s good at throwing a football is disrespectful to sexual assault survivors everywhere.

And the Saints have shown us they’re willing to live with that by taking the process this far. It lines up with their past behavior in overlooking the accusations against Jameis Winston and Carl Granderson, who actually served time in a Wyoming prison prior to his return to the team. They may have a female owner who promotes activism in a wide array of fields. But they’re in the business of winning football games, not taking moral stands, and they feel trading for Watson would give them the best opportunity to do that. We’ll see how it plays out.

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ESPN: Cowboys paid $2.4M to settle with cheerleaders, retired Cowboys exec also vouyeristic towards Charlotte Jones

Longtime PR man Rich Dalrymple is accused of two incidents in 2015 involving the club’s cheerleaders and owner Jerry Jones’s daughter. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Troubling allegations have come to light involving Rich Dalrymple, the Cowboys’ longtime senior vice president of public relations and communications, who retired earlier this month after more than three decades with the club.

The story, reported by ESPN’s Don Van Natta Jr. on Wednesday, involves two separate incidents from 2015. In the first, Dalrymple is accused of spying on four Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders as they undressed inside their own locker room at the Cowboys’ home stadium. The second allegation Dalrymple is accused of is that he used his phone to capture ‘upskirt photographs’ of Charlotte Jones Anderson, the Cowboys executive vice president and daughter of owner Jerry Jones, during the 2015 NFL draft.

“Multiple sources tell ESPN that at a kickoff luncheon on September 2 of that year,” the ESPN report states, “Dalrymple was seen by a cheerleader standing behind a partial wall inside their locker room at AT&T Stadium. The cheerleader accused him of pointing his iPhone horizontally at the women as they were changing out of their unmistakable blue and white uniforms.”

The network goes on to report the role that team owner Jerry Jones played in containing the story.

“Documents obtained by ESPN show that in 2016, team owner Jerry Jones paid the four cheerleaders and their lawyers a $2.4-million-dollar confidential settlement. As part of the agreement, the cheerleaders promised to keep quiet about the alleged incident. Three people with knowledge of the situation told ESPN shortly after the alleged incident, a Cowboys security guard wanted to report the allegation to the police, but law enforcement was never called. A team representative said the security guard never mentioned wanting to call the police in his interview with human resources later that day. According to the sources, team officials urged the four cheerleaders to report the incident to the team’s HR department, and they did. But they were unsatisfied with the resulting investigation.”

As per Van Natta, “A Cowboys representative says Dalrymple told the team he entered the locked cheerleaders’ dressing room with a security key card only to use the bathroom, and left as soon as he realized someone was there.”

A former cheerleader familiar with the incident said what happened became known to several others on the squad.

“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.”

ESPN’s bombshell report reveals that Dalrymple is also at the heart of a second disturbing claim, this one pre-dating the locker room incident by several months.

Again, from the ESPN report:

“A separate allegation involving Dalrymple centers around the April 2015 NFL draft. ESPN has obtained a sworn affidavit by a Cowboys fan who claimed, while watching a live video stream of the team’s draft war room, he noticed Dalrymple repeatedly using his phone to take what he called ‘upskirt photographs’ of Charlotte Jones Anderson, the Cowboys executive vice president and Jerry Jones’s daughter. The fan’s affidavit was presented to the Cowboys by lawyers representing the cheerleaders, and within several weeks, the Cowboys settled with them. ESPN was not able to obtain a copy or view the war room video in question. A Cowboys representative told ESPN the team had been aware of that allegation prior to the affidavit being presented by the cheerleaders’ lawyers.”

The war room claim was made in a Facebook post made by the fan as the Cowboys were about to select cornerback Byron Jones in the first round. The cheerleaders and their lawyers discovered the post months later as they searched for other evidence of misconduct or past behavior from Dalrymple.

“The team says it ‘thoroughly investigated’ both alleged incidents, including an examination of Dalrymple’s phone. The team representative said, ‘The organization took these allegations extremely seriously… The investigation was handled consistent with best legal and HR practices, and the investigation found evidence of wrongdoing.'”

That representative was Jim Wilkinson, a communications consultant for the Cowboys. Wilkinson maintains, “The most basic common sense tells you that if Jerry Jones believed in any way that someone had even remotely done something like that to any member of his family, that person would have been fired immediately.”

Just over four months later, the four cheerleaders say Dalrymple was the man they confronted in their locker room- phone in his hand- as they changed clothes.

“If any wrongdoing had been found, Rich would have been terminated immediately. Everyone involved felt just terrible about this unfortunate incident,” Wilkinson said.

ESPN states, “A disciplinary letter was placed in Dalrymple’s personnel file, but the Cowboys declined to release that letter or any details resulting from its investigation. Team owner Jerry Jones also declined to comment.”

The team does not dispute that Dalrymple used his key card to access the locker room that day using a rear entrance, never addressing attorneys’ claims that “a men’s restroom was 20 feet away.” The Cowboys revoked Dalrymple’s access to the cheerleaders’ locker room and made sweeping security changes in that area of the stadium.

The cheerleaders, their spouses, their lawyers, the four Joneses- Jerry, Stephen, Jerry Jr., and Charlotte- along with Dalrymple himself all reportedly signed an agreement in May 2016 “denying any wrongdoing and that the alleged voyeurism even took place.”

Each of the four cheerleaders allegedly received $399,523.27 as part of their settlement.

Dalrymple said he had spoken to Jones about his retirement from the Cowboys during the team’s 2021 campaign, electing to wait to walk away until after the season was over.

He was originally brought to Dallas at the recommendation of Jimmy Johnson, his coworker from the University of Miami during Johnson’s tenure as head coach there. Dalrymple announced his retirement on February 2. He was 29 when he was first hired by Jones; he’ll turn 62 later this year.

Dalrymple told ESPN, “This has nothing to do with my retirement from a long and fulfilling career, and I was only contacted about this story after I had retired.”

But as has been pointed out, Dalrymple’s retirement after 32 years with the club and inclusion in the Jones family’s inner circle was barely recognized by the Cowboys organization, with no team press release, interview quote, or even a mention on their official website.

In a statement to ESPN, Dalrymple said, “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.”

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Why Russell Wilson continues to recruit Antonio Brown to Seahawks

Seattle Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson continues to recruit Antonio Brown to the team despite the wide receiver’s many issues.

Russell Wilson has been recruiting free-agent wide receiver Antonio Brown to the Seahawks despite his well-documented flaws, destructive tendencies, and legal issues over the past few years.

On Thursday, Wilson expressed his belief that after spending over a year away from football and talking with him, Brown has learned from his past mistakes and his ego has been taken down a notch.

“The reality about Antonio’s is he’s one of the best players to ever play this game,’’ Wilson told reporters Thursday. “I think that he’s always been a special player in terms of the field, I think. And you know the reality is, with Antonio he’s had some tough moments in his life, especially as of late, and I think he’s gone through a lot of things that he wishes he could take back and not do and not say. ”

Wilson stated that the Seahawks’ culture is devoted to helping players recover from their issues and that he and his teammates would treat Brown like any other player if the organization acquired him.

“I think with Coach Carroll, I think with the teammates that we have, the men that we have and the growth, I think if he does play football, I think this is a great place if he does play again,” he said. “I think this is a place where he’ll grow a lot as a man too, as well. And I think that we’re going to continue to try to help anybody who walks in this locker room as you guys know.

“That’s just part of our culture is trying to help people.”

While Wilson may have good intentions and Brown has put up some incredible numbers throughout his career, Seattle is already loaded with ideal targets, most prominently Tyler Lockett and DK Metcalf. Greg Olsen and Chris Carson have also been reliable in the passing game and Will Dissly and Freddie Swain have had a few good moments themselves this year.

Furthermore, it must be noted that Brown’s controversial incidents and allegations are many in number and quite serious.

Just something(s) to think about.

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Brown’s Thursday meeting with NFL likely first of multiple as part of league investigation into wide

Antonio Brown met with NFL officials for more than four hours on Thursday to discuss the league’s investigation into allegations of sexual assault, misconduct, and rape.

Antonio Brown met with NFL officials for more than four hours on Thursday to discuss the league’s investigation into allegations of sexual assault, misconduct, and rape.