Congress is turning up the heat on the NFL and one of its most beleaguered team owners.
On Wednesday, the House Committee on Oversight and Reform invited NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell and Washington Commanders owner Daniel Snyder to testify at a hearing June 22 about allegations of sexual harassment and workplace misconduct within the league and the team.
In a statement, committee leaders said they also plan to discuss more broadly “the NFL’s role in setting and enforcing standards across the League, and legislative reforms needed to address these issues across the NFL and other workplaces.”
In other words: a bunch of things the NFL probably doesn’t want to have to answer for under oath.
Throughout the inquiry, congressional investigators have been “met with obstruction from the Commanders and the NFL at every turn,” committee Chair Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., said in a statement.
The committee opened its investigation in October after the NFL conducted an internal probe of Snyder’s conduct, which resulted in a $10 million fine and his suspension from day-to-day activities. But the NFL released only a few vague paragraphs that said “bullying and intimidation” took place. That was insufficient. And increasingly, it’s looking like the league’s failure to ethically resolve its internal issues has opened it up to even more scrutiny. (Snyder has denied the harassment allegations.)
Now, the NFL is in the middle of a legal minefield.
Anything Goodell and Snyder say, if they testify, can and will be used against them by federal or state prosecutors and by plaintiffs’ attorneys, giving the NFL plenty to worry about.








