The NFLPA just slapped around Troy Vincent like he was a worthless person. This is why you dont want lawyers in on this, because it wont matter the facts of Deflategate they will attack the process and win.
The NFL is about to be destroyed and this will be the end of Goodell. In court it wont matter at all if Brady deflated balls, the process will be what is taken to court and the NFL wont stand a chance. This is why I wait for the lawyers to make their cases, especially smart ones like Kessler. I see why he is the thorn in the NFLS side. He owns them.
NFLPA @NFLPA 23m23 minutes ago
#NFLPA Notice of Appeal of Tom Brady Discipline:
http://bit.ly/1cDBQWw
Two things:
The NFLPA scares the NFL about as much as I do, and
Court? This ain't going to court.
So how did the Saints get many of the Bountygate penalties overturned? Didn't they go to court . . . or was that just on straight appeal? Also, their case took well over a year to be heard and adjudicated. How did they manage that?
People seem to think the Pats won't take this to court because Brady will have to turn over his phone/texts/emails and the two ball handling clowns would have to take the stand. If Brady has minimal info about Deflategate on his communications devices, why not go to court? I think his concern was that he had other personal/private information he didn't want people to have the chance to access or copy. And by the time things had devolved to Wells asking for Brady and attorney to give whatever they saw fit, Brady's team had figured out he was going to get fried with or without his texts so said why bother.
As for the other two maroons, one would think they would keep their mouths shut and they will be taken care of by the team at some point. If they just stick to what they said in their other interviews, I don't think their testimony would be much more damning than it already has.
A case could be made (if a court wanted to hear it is another matter) that the league's sanctions are far beyond the scope compared to penalties for other team's infractions. I don't know the law well enough to have any clue if a court would hear such a case.
They both changed their story multiple times. They will get hammered if they get questioned again.
One example from the report regarding the 50,000 yard ball which Jastremski texted multiple people about being the ball he got signed by Brady and he kept.
When interviewed, Jastremski appeared evasive in response to questions about receiving autographed items from Brady. Jastremski acknowledged that he asked Brady to autograph a football for him this past season, but
when asked whether it was a particular or special football, Jastremski said that it was “just a general” football. In response to further questions, Jastremski said that he was only guessing that the football had been used in a game, that
he did not recall the game in which the football was used, and that the football did “not really” have any special significance. When asked specifically whether he recalled that Brady crossed the 50,000 yard career milestone in October 2014,
Jastremski then acknowledged that the autographed ball “was the 50,000 passing yard ball” and that it was intended to be a “minicollection item for myself.” When asked to confirm that the ball Brady autographed for him was the actual ball used by Brady to reach the 50,000 yard mark,
Jastremski said that it was not the actual ball, but rather another ball used in that game, and that the Director of Security for the 56 According to Jastremski, although he would like Brady to sign a jersey, he has never asked Brady to do so and does not think people “understand the awkwardness” of asking someone at work for an autograph. In contrast, Brady said that he signs multiple autographs a day, and did not think that he had ever turned down an autograph request from anyone associated with the Patriots. 94 Patriots retrieved the actual milestone ball at the game. When confronted with the messages referenced above,
Jastremski said that his statements that the autographed ball was the actual 50,000 yard football were not truthful. Jastremski said that he could not recall telling Brady that it was the actual 50,000 yard football, but wanted Brady to sign the football “as a 50,000 yard memory.”