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July 20, 2014 at 8:51 am #2002znModerator
Vikings respond to Kluwe allegations
The Minnesota Vikings have suspended special teams coordinator Mike Priefer for three games after an independent investigation of the organization into claims by former punter Chris Kluwe showed that Priefer made a homophobic remark during the 2012 season, the team announced Friday night.
Vikings owner Zygi Wilf and president Mark Wilf released a statement Friday, saying in part: “In this instance, Coach Priefer fell short of what is expected. Accordingly, we have decided to suspend Coach Priefer without pay for the first three games of the 2014 regular season. In addition, he will be required to satisfactorily complete specialized workplace training that will include an emphasis on the managing of diversity and sexual orientation.
More from ESPN.com
The Vikings have taken the hard road with former punter Chris Kluwe. They should have met his demands, settled and made this case go away, writes Ben Goessling. Story
The Minnesota Vikings released a 29-page summary of a 150-page report on the investigation into special teams coach Mike Priefer. The memo can be found here. Story
Vikings’ response to report
“If Coach Priefer completes this training and conducts himself in accordance with our workplace policies, we will consider reducing the length of his suspension by one game.
“We will continue to hold all team members accountable and take the outlined critical steps to further educate everyone within our organization both individually and collectively. We will accept nothing less than creating a franchise that Minnesotans and Vikings fans everywhere can be proud of on and off the field.”
The Vikings also will donate $100,000 to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender rights groups.
Priefer apologized in the statement.
“I owe an apology to many people — the Wilf family, the Minnesota Vikings organization and fans, my family, the LGBT community, Chris Kluwe and anyone else that I offended with my insensitive remark,” he said. “I regret what has occurred and what I said. I am extremely sorry but I will learn from this situation and will work on educating others to create more tolerance and respect.”
In a Deadspin article in January, Kluwe alleged that Priefer made anti-gay slurs and taunts and claimed he was released by the Vikings because of his gay rights advocacy.
Chris Madel, a former Justice Department attorney, and Eric Magnuson, a former chief justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court, from the Minneapolis-based law firm Robins, Kaplan, Ciresi and Miller, recently presented their report into the allegations to the Vikings after interviewing 31 people and examining 121 gigabytes of data.
According to a 29-page summary of the report, Priefer denied the claims in a statement after the accusations were publicized, and again denied making homophobic remarks in his first meeting with investigators on Jan. 6. However, after long-snapper Cullen Loeffler told investigators on April 23 that he did hear Priefer make a comment about “putting all the gays on an island and nuking it,” the coach said he “was not going to disagree” with Loeffler’s statement about the comment. Loeffler told investigators, though, that Priefer was joking at the time, and that both he and Kluwe laughed off the remark.
[+] EnlargeMike Priefer
AP Photo/Charlie NeibergallSpecial teams coordinator Mike Priefer will be suspended three games and required to complete specialized workplace training following reviews of Chris Kluwe’s allegations.The summary of the report, however, did not find evidence to support Kluwe’s claim he was cut for reasons other than his on-field performance. Investigators talked to former All-Pro punter Craig Hentrich, who gave Kluwe a “C” for his 2012 performance, and former Chicago Bears general manager Jerry Angelo, who said he “in all likelihood” would have released Kluwe after that season. According to the report, Priefer gave Kluwe the highest grade for his 2012 performance of any of the Vikings’ season-ending reviews.
General manager Rick Spielman told investigators that the Vikings’ talent evaluators “pretty unanimously” agreed Kluwe should be released, citing his struggles with directional punting. The Vikings took punter Jeff Locke in the fifth round of the 2013 draft and cut Kluwe after their rookie camp.
The NFL commended the investigation.
“We support our teams enforcing their workplace policies and commend the Wilfs for doing a thorough investigation and taking appropriate steps in response to the findings,” spokesman Greg Aiello said.
In an email obtained by ESPN from a source close to the investigation, Kluwe’s attorney, Clayton Halunen, told Madel on July 8 he did not think the independent report — which includes a 150-page summary, footnotes and interview transcripts among other evidence — should be made public, instead arguing for an executive summary of the findings.
However, Halunen said the executive summary he was referring to in the email is the same as the 150-page document he is now trying to get in court, adding that he and Madel were only discussing the omission of report footnotes and interview transcripts that would bring sensitive personal information to light.
The 29-page summary of the investigation released Friday night was not acceptable to Halunen or Kluwe, the attorney said.
Halunen said the punter still plans to file suit against the team in Minnesota state court next week and will seek damages in the neighborhood of $10 million.
Halunen said he and Kluwe had asked for a four-to-eight game suspension for Priefer, and added Kluwe had asked for the Vikings to donate $1 million to charities that support LGBT-friendly causes. The team instead will donate $100,000.
Portions of the report painted Kluwe in a poor picture, like his jokes about the Jerry Sandusky scandal and an incident where he dropped his pants in front of 20-25 businesspeople who were touring the locker room.
Kluwe posted multiple tweets in response Friday night, including:
Halunen admitted parts of the report “are not flattering to my client.” Despite that, he said, he wants the full report to be available to the public.
“They will fight over it,” Halunen said. “I know it. If they are required to give it to me, they’ll try to do it under a protective order, but I’m going to fight to keep it public.”
July 20, 2014 at 4:27 pm #2033MackeyserModeratorSo much for Kluwe being a liar, and so many in the NFL circling the wagons around Priefer.
As for Kluwe’s latest statements, “The NFL is a league where you can get redemption for killing someone, for beating your wife in an elevator, for driving drunk, for a whole variety of things but when you speak out for civil rights, that’s the one thing you cannot get redeemed for,” Kluwe added.
And Kluwe isn’t the only one. Ask Brandon Ayenbadejo how the employment outlook has been. And Kerry Rhodes WAS one of the top Free Safeties in the NFL. Then someone “outed” him in 2012 and all of a sudden, he simply cannot find work in the NFL while it is the most passing oriented it’s ever been.
Michael Sam, SEC Co-Defensive Player of the Year was FINALLY drafted in the SEVENTH round by a very secure coach with deep league ties in a largely symbolic move.
NOT in the last decade has the SEC Defensive player of the year been drafted outside of the FIRST round. Not all of them were certain at the next level. However, based on their level of competition and the volume of production that warrants such an honor, teams understand that the SEC DPOY is someone worthy of a 1st round pick. Unless he’s gay.
What the NFL is STILL saying at the corporate and management level is that the NFL isn’t safe for gays or those who advocate for them.
I think the players and fans may change that…eventually.
But seriously… as long as the NFL operates under the paradigm of forgetting about those fired, blacklisted or ostracized and then give minor penalties to those who cause the problems, then I dunno who long it will take to see real progress
Sports is the crucible of human virtue. The distillate remains are human vice.
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