Sgt. Largent
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therealjohncarlson":2v3az3bv said:Sgt. Largent":2v3az3bv said:therealjohncarlson":2v3az3bv said:NFL seems to be opening themselves up to a pretty hefty lawsuit if they just suspend him indefinitely, especially if he is able to eventually wiggle out of charges when this goes to court. I'm hearing that due to covid he might not go to court until 2021/2022.
Doesn't matter what the end result of Dunbar's legal matters are, as we found out with Reed they can suspend a player that wasn't even arrested or convicted of anything.
All the exempt status tells us is that the league sees this as a serious enough offense to not even wait for the legal proceedings to conclude, they're going to not let him practice or play immediately.
Now the ball's in the John and Pete's court to either pay him for sitting all year, or cut him. My guess? Dunbar's going to get cut. Why pay a guy for a year or two when you can free up his salary to use elsewhere.
Hmm I know what they have done in the past but Ive never heard of a situation where it could potentially drag on for years with no apparent hard evidence of any wrong doing occurring. Not sure what his legal rights in all this is, but I think if they NFL suspends him until this is all cleared up and it lasts years I could see this being grounds to sue the NFL and change how they conduct business.
The main argument I would think Dunbar could make is that without being convicted of anything the NFL caused him to directly miss out on making mutli millions of dollars in the prime of his career playing in the only league available for him to make a reasonable salary using the skills he has.
I know this is an argument that can be made in other careers where there is no real substitute for their trade skills. Not sure how many protections the NFL has in place against this, but I would guess if this happens the way it appears to be happening we will find out soon enough.
The NFL isn't beholden to anti trust laws and practices.
That mean they have complete autonomy when it comes to most legal and FTC matters. Create their own network, bypass all those rules and regulations.....and in this case they're exempt from normal workplace laws when it comes to adhering to firing, fining and suspending players without the involvement or conclusion of the courts.
So again, as there is dozens and dozens of examples of players (and owners/coaches) being fined and suspended without any legal implications, they can exempt Dunbar if they want........and they did.
All the league office cares about is does this violate the CBA, and it doesn't.