There's indirect evidence suggesting Kensil was pushing an anti pats agenda, but I don't think it's a big conspiracy. I think the league just sucks at dealing with these things.
The Browns cheated? OK whatever. The Patriots won three superbowls and went to an afc championship in the last six years and got caught videotaping something? Uh oh. Then the media runs with it and the NFL has to come down hard. It doesn't really matter what the rule violation was, the media was talking about taping walk throughs, knowing plays before they happened, and all kinds of craziness.
The ray rice thing was a joke. Uh oh, a star player punched his girlfriend in a hotel elevator. We better suspend him. Oh no, the media got hold of the tape? Better suspend him again.
So when Tomlin cheats in the middle of the season and the league can give him a fine and be done with it, they try to get it over with quickly and move on to the next week of games. But when the pats get accused of something in the middle of the superbowl prep week, it's a national news story. And with kensil feeding misinformation to the press, and the NFL refusing to recant it, the story blew up all over again.
There's no question that a coach actually interfering with the players in the game on a likely touchdown impacted the results. We don't even know if the balls were deflated. But the timing and the media coverage dictated the penalty because the league sucks at this stuff.
		
		
	 
Maybe so.
I don't necessarily agree, but I think the punishments levied in both Spy/Deflategate speak to someone/s in the league office  believing that the Pats did what they are accused of and that it had an effect on competitive advantage.  I also believe they likely have access to information we don't, but that's not the point.
The difference being Tomlins actions are akin to a penalty, say PI on a sure touchdown, on a single play.  An egregious penalty, but still effecting only a single play.  Downstream plays are obviously indirectly impacted just as they are with any flag thrown.
However, if I take the stance on the Pats actions that they are guilty and it gave them any type of advantage, then that means those actions had a direct effect on every single play of multiple games calling into question the validity of those outcomes.
That's important, because that then threatens league $.  Words like "fixed" and "integrity" start getting thrown around which drives off potential investors and new league locations.  Those words don't come up when a flag is thrown, or Tomlin obstructs a player, or Ben is accused of rape because those things don't have the same direct impact on every play within every game.
Again, I personally don't believe that about the Pats actions, but I think it's clear the NFL front office does and I think the punishments levied reflect that.  What the Pats have now, twice, been accused of has the potential to negatively impact league revenue in ways all the other yourteamcheats.com comparisons don't.