A law enforcement official told the Associated Press on Wednesday that video footage of football player Ray Rice hitting and knocking his then-fiancee, Janay Rice, unconscious was sent to the NFL in April — a claim that directly contradicts NFL commissioner Roger Goodell’s argument that no NFL officials had seen the footage before Monday.
As a result of the league’s handling of the incident, which took place in February before the couple married, fans, women’s rights groups, and lawmakers have leveled harsh criticism at the organization and Goodell in particular, with several calling on the NFL commissioner to resign.
Goodell initially suspended Rice, a Baltimore Ravens running back, for just two games after video surfaced on Feb. 19 showing the athlete dragging an unconscious Janay Rice (née Palmer) out of an elevator at the Revel hotel-casino in Atlantic City. The NFL only announced the football player’s indefinite suspension from the league on Monday, after a second video from the incident was released by TMZ.
According to the AP, the law enforcement official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, has a 12-second voice mail from an NFL source confirming that the office received the full tape. In the voicemail a currently unidentified female official expresses thanks and says: “You’re right. It’s terrible.” This woman has told the AP that the NFL never followed up on her concerns.
NFL spokesperson Brian McCarthy said that the league has no knowledge of having received the entire tape. “We are not aware of anyone who possessed or saw the video before it was made public on Monday. We will look into it,” he said.
Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), who has been one of the loudest and most prominent critics of Goodell and the NFL in the wake of the Rice scandal, said this new AP report strongly suggests “Goodell must go.”
“The current leadership of the NFL cannot be trusted to fairly, genuinely implement policies that address domestic violence. As Roger Goodell himself said several years ago when allegations arose that the New Orleans Saints offered bounties for injuring opponents, ‘ignorance is not an excuse.’ The NFL has an obligation to do better, and a position of public trust – benefiting from broad anti-trust exemptions granted by Congress, and hundreds of millions of dollars in taxpayer benefits. If these allegations are true, Roger Goodell is part of the problem, and he is incapable of achieving a real solution,” said Blumenthal in a statement on Wednesday night.
Goodell, in a memo sent on Wednesday to chief executives and club presidents, insisted again that the league did not see the second video until it was publicly released on Monday. He added that starting in February, the NFL asked multiple law enforcement authorities — including the New Jersey State Police, the Atlantic City Police Department, and the Atlantic County Solicitor’s Office — for the footage.
The commissioner said those entities were not permitted to provide the video. Goodell admits the NFL did not ask Revel directly for the video because the league’s understanding of the law was that Revel was prohibited from turning the material to a third party during a law enforcement proceeding.
“As always, we will continuously examine our procedures. I believe that we took a significant step forward with the enhanced policies on domestic violence and sexual assault that were announced last month. I also know that we will be judged on our actions going forward. I am confident that those actions will demonstrate our commitment to address this issue seriously,” Goodell wrote.
Late on Wednesday night, Ian Rapoport of Rap Sheet reported and the NFL later confirmed that ex-FBI director Robert Mueller will be conducting an investigation into the league’s handling of the Rice matter. Goodell has promised his full cooperation, including access to all the league’s internal files.
“Director Mueller’s investigation will be overseen by NFL owners John Mara of the New York Giants and Art Rooney of the Pittsburgh Steelers, and the final report will be made public. Mara and Rooney are both attorneys,” Brian McCarthy, VP of communications for the NFL said in a statement on Wednesday night.
Meanwhile members of Congress on continued to demand answers and more transparency from Goodell.
A dozen Democrats on the House of Representatives’ Judiciary Committee sent a letter to Goodell on Wednesday asking for greater transparency about how the league investigated the football player, who was caught on tape abusing his then-fiancée Janay Rice in an Atlantic City, New Jersey, elevator in February.
BREAKING: AP Source: Law enforcement official sent copy of Ray Rice tape to NFL executive in April
— The Associated Press (@AP) September 10, 2014
The lawmakers noted that Goodell has previously said the NFL asked for the video footage but was denied access to it.
“To our knowledge, the public has not been informed as to specifically how and in what context the request was made, and specifically how and in what context the request was made and specifically how relevant law enforcement responded,” says the letter.








