In Domestic Violence Cases, N.F.L. Has a History of Lenience
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/20/sports/football/in-domestic-violence-cases-nfl-has-a-history-of-lenience.html?_r=0
In Domestic Violence Cases, N.F.L. Has a History of Lenience
By BILL PENNINGTON and STEVE EDERSEPT. 19, 2014
On April 10, 2007, after more than 50 National Football League players had been arrested in the previous football season, Commissioner Roger Goodell was widely hailed for instituting a newly stringent personal conduct policy. Mr. Goodell threatened to banish players for off-the-field transgressions and installed himself as the judge and jury presiding over every case.
Mr. Goodell insisted that he would mete out discipline without waiting for the judicial system.
It is my job not law enforcements job to protect the National Football League, he said at the time.
But in his role as the N.F.L.s hard-bitten sheriff, Mr. Goodell appears to have had a major blind spot: domestic violence cases. Players charged with domestic violence routinely received considerably lighter punishments than players accused of other offenses, like drug use or drunken driving. Often, they were not punished at all. On Friday, seven years after he implemented the personal conduct policy, Mr. Goodell acknowledged publicly that it had failed and would be overhauled.
On Friday, seven years after he implemented the personal conduct policy, Roger Goodell acknowledged publicly that it had failed and would be overhauled.