NFL will not be allowed to suspend Pat and Kevin Williams until the case is heard by

cowboyjoe

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Pat Williams-DL- Vikings May. 21 - 11:32 am et


The NFL will not be allowed to suspend Pat and Kevin Williams until the case is heard by the Minnesota Court of Appeals, a Minnesota judge ruled Friday.

This should keep Saints DE Will Smith in the clear also, for now. It remains unclear when the appeal will be heard and as Profootballtalk.com points out, there was an eight-month lag between Brian Cushing's sample collection and suspension. This story is sure to drag on throughout the summer.
Source: Profootballtalk on NBCSports.com
Related: Kevin Williams, Will Smith
 

LandryFan

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cowboyjoe;3409979 said:
Pat Williams-DL- Vikings May. 21 - 11:32 am et


The NFL will not be allowed to suspend Pat and Kevin Williams until the case is heard by the Minnesota Court of Appeals, a Minnesota judge ruled Friday.

This should keep Saints DE Will Smith in the clear also, for now. It remains unclear when the appeal will be heard and as Profootballtalk.com points out, there was an eight-month lag between Brian Cushing's sample collection and suspension. This story is sure to drag on throughout the summer.
Source: Profootballtalk on NBCSports.com
Related: Kevin Williams, Will Smith
True justice would entail having their cases heard and suspensions meted out just in time for the playoffs. Would sheriff Goodell suspend them for the playoffs if it came to that, or would he wait til the following year? He's very inconsistent when it comes to punishment, IMO.
 

cowboyjoe

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HoleInTheRoof;3409982 said:
Well. That sucks.

wait till you read this;
Pat and Kevin Williams win another injunction
Posted by Mike Florio on May 21, 2010 11:19 AM ET
Though it remains to be seen whether Vikings defensive tackles Pat and Kevin Williams ultimately will avoid a four-game suspension for violating the league's steroids policy, the NFL won't be permitted to impose the suspension until the case is addressed by the Minnesota Court of Appeals.

Brian Murphy of the St. Paul Pioneer Press reports that Judge Gary Larson ruled Friday morning that the Williamses satisfied the standard for proving that the suspensions should be blocked while the players exercise their appellate rights.

It's a no-brainer, really. Once the suspensions are imposed, the litigation becomes moot. Given the Brian Cushing situation, which involved an eight-month lag between sample collection and suspension, the NFL will have an even harder time convincing anyone that the suspensions must be imposed immediately in order to preserve the integrity of the program.

The timetable for resolving the appeal remains unclear. The NFL could request an expedited review. Eventually, however, the Williamses would be making the same request regarding a potential appeal to the Minnesota Supreme Court, in the event that their next move fails.

Directly benefiting from the development are the Saints and defensive end Will Smith. The league received full clearance to suspend Smith and former Saints defensive end Charles Grant last year, but the NFL opted not to execute the suspension, apparently due to concerns that it would create a perception of inconsistent treatment.

Earlier this month, Judge Larson concluded that the NFL violated Minnesota law via the drug testing of Kevin and Pat Williams. Larson, however, ruled that the suspensions could be implemented, finding that the players had demonstrated no legal injury.
 

Derinyar

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I don't see why this is taking so long or that there is actually a case here. The Williams boys agreed to the poilcy when they joined the NFL/NFLPA. Since they "unknowningly" took a banned substance they are the victims of the big bad NFL.
 

cowboyjoe

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Latest StarCaps decision likely means Williamses will be available all year
Posted by Mike Florio on May 21, 2010 11:47 AM ET
We've obtained and digested the 11-page written opinion from Judge Gary Larson regarding his decision to extend a temporary injunction that prevents the implementation of four-game suspensions against Vikings defensive tackles Pat and Kevin Williams until their appeal is resolved.

Our first impression? It's highly unlikely that the Williamses will be suspended at any point in the 2010 season.

Even if the NFL expedites the process before the Minnesota Court of Appeals, nothing in Judge Larson's order suggests that it applies only to the first of two levels available to the Williamses. After the Minnesota Court of Appeals comes the Minnesota Supreme Court, and it would be virtually unprecedented if both levels of appeal were resolved before the end of the calendar year.

Especially since none of the elected officials who'll be handling the case benefit in any way from moving quickly to ensure that the suspensions can be enforced against two key players of the home team.

If anything, Judge Larson's order seems to welcome scrutiny from a higher court. He finds that the Williamses enjoy a "likelihood" of prevailing on appeal, explaining that the issues presented in the litigation "were a matter of first impression," and that Larson had no precedent available to guide him. Thus, even though Larson believes that there was no harm arising from the failure of the NFL to provide notice of the positive result within three days, in violation of Minnesota law, Larson seems to acknowledge that an appeals court may find that he was wr-wr-wr-wr-judicially misinformed.

"Public policy . . . dictates that [the NFL] should not be permitted to benefit from its own misconduct," Larson wrote. "Here, [the NFL] knew Star Caps contained Bumetanide, that players were ingesting Bumetanide, that Bumetanide was dangerous, and withheld information about Star Caps, knowing that players would suffer as a result. [The NFL] created a trap that it knew would result in violations of the program."

In response to the argument by the league that it would be harmed by an injunction, Judge Larson disagreed.

"[The NFL] could have easily avoided this very situation by informing players or teams about what it already knew -- that Star Caps contained a hidden, dangerous substance," Larson explained. "[The NFL] knew that many players were already inadvertently ingesting Bumetanide, and continued to place the health, safety, and welfare of its players in jeopardy, so that Adolpho Birch could play a game of gotcha. The league clearly allowed a half dozen other players to use Bumetanide without punishment."

Based on Larson's statements, there's a chance that the suspensions ultimately will be scuttled. Until the appeals are resolved, Pat and Kevin Williams -- and Saints defensive end Will Smith -- will be permitted to keep playing.

It's very good news for Vikings and Saints fans. And also for NBC, which will have all three players available when the season kicks off on September 9 with a nationally-televised game between Minnesota and New Orleans.
 

Cowboysfan570

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Yeah, lets have those playoff/SB winning teams keep their players all year while they're using banned substances! Makes sense to me, after all, integrity of the sport? Bah!

The irksome whinings of old men is all that is.
 
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