I suspect what's going on is when Browns players get in their overpriced hotrods they imagine they are escaping.
Some do but obviously not all of them.Browns. Where NFL careers go to die.
| Player | Role & Tenure | Notable Crime(s) |
| Darryl Henley | CB, 1989–1993 | Drug trafficking, attempted murder |
| Leonard Little | DE, 1998–2009 | Vehicular manslaughter (fatal DUI) |
| Lawrence Phillips | RB, 1996–1997 | Assault, attempted murder, violent offenses |
| Alonzo Williams | RB, 1987 | Robbery spree |
| Claude Terrell | OG, mid-2000s | Domestic assault; sexual assault at gunpoint |
| Zac Stacy | RB, 2013–2014 | Domestic violence (aggravated battery) |
| Tre Mason | RB, 2015–2016 | Fleeing police (ATV chase) |
| Greg Robinson | OT, 2014 | Drug trafficking/possession |
| Robert Quinn | DE, 2011–2018 | Hit-and-run crash, reckless driving |
| Demarcus Robinson | WR, 2024 | DUI, speeding |
Yeah - I remember the USC running back coach settled out of court on the Bush Allegations because the NCAA didn't want the public to know that they screwed over USC with just bullshit allegations that would not have been proven in court.Ole Golden Chain won't be getting discovery or his day in court now because of this. What this ruling truly means now is the NFL is going to being willing to settle this out of court before any of that happens. So Jon is definitely a big winner because of this... look for him to get a giant settlement check now. They will be happy to fork over however much money it will take for Jon to agree before this shit show happens and reveals to the public what happens behind the scenes.
A big settlement and the coa hing the Dolphins next year.Ole Golden Chain won't be getting discovery or his day in court now because of this. What this ruling truly means now is the NFL is going to being willing to settle this out of court before any of that happens. So Jon is definitely a big winner because of this... look for him to get a giant settlement check now. They will be happy to fork over however much money it will take for Jon to agree before this shit show happens and reveals to the public what happens behind the scenes.
I know. I had to re-read it to see that Brady wasn't the offender. I guess the guy figured mentioning Brady first would get more attention.That intro was absurd. It should read:Former Patriot offensive linrman Shaq Mason was charged with……..
The Brady part and the Super Boel Champ part are not needed. We can all deduce that part for ourselves
![]()
Sources: NFLPA puts one of top lawyers on leave
The NFL Players Association put Heather McPhee, whose allegations helped prompt a federal investigation, on paid administrative leave after multiple employees filed complaints with the union's human resources department, sources said.www.espn.com
Rams' Alaric Jackson sued by woman over sex video
![]()
Paula LavigneNov 13, 2025, 03:58 PM ET
A Philadelphia woman alleges Los Angeles Rams left tackle Alaric Jackson recorded her without her consent during sex, repeatedly refused to delete the video and taunted her with it, according to a lawsuit filed Thursday.
The lawsuit, filed in Los Angeles Superior Court, said that the woman, who is not named, reported the incident to the NFL, which investigated Jackson and suspended him.
Jackson served a two-game suspension without pay in August 2024 after the NFL announced he had violated the league's personal conduct policy but gave no further details.
Weeks later, both Jackson and Rams coach Sean McVay declined to share details with reporters.
"That's behind us now, I'm keeping it in-house right now..." Jackson said. "I was definitely selfish, but it's behind me now and we're going to move forward with it."
An agent for Jackson said Thursday that he was not aware of the lawsuit and did not have an immediate comment. An NFL spokesperson referred to Jackson's 2024 suspension and declined further comment.
The woman met Jackson on Instagram and visited him in Los Angeles at his invitation in May 2024, according to the lawsuit. She knocked his phone away during sex, the lawsuit states, and later learned Jackson had been recording her without her consent.
The woman demanded that he delete the video, but Jackson refused, telling her "she 'would never know' whether the recording was truly deleted," according to the lawsuit. The woman returned home to Philadelphia the next day and continued to press Jackson about deleting the video.
Jackson eventually told her he had deleted it, the lawsuit states, only to send her the video the next day "confirming that he had lied about its deletion."
According to the woman's attorneys, there was no indication that Jackson posted the video online or shared its contents with a third party.
The woman reported the incident to the Los Angeles Police Department, which told her that while the recording could constitute criminal conduct, she would have to return to Los Angeles or work with her local police department to make the report, according to the lawsuit.
She decided not to pursue a criminal case, but reported the incident to the NFL, the lawsuit states.
The lawsuit notes the woman has suffered "emotional distress, loss of privacy, and psychological harm" and cites violations of gender violence and revenge porn laws, along with allegations of invasion of privacy, intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress, and fraud.
In August 2018, Jackson missed Iowa's season opener after being suspended for an unspecified violation of team rules. School officials said it was not a legal issue.
In February, the Rams and Jackson agreed to a three-year, $57 million contract extension.
https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/46956519/rams-lt-jackson-sued-woman-sex-video