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Ray Rice Domestic Violence Case/NFL Cover Up/Media Circus?
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OrangestO
Hmm. Where to begin?

Has anyone been following? Of course you have, it's being shoved down our throats.



http://www.cnn.com/2014/09/09/us/ray-rice-timeline/

quote:
Ray Rice has called the February punch that knocked out his now-wife "inexcusable."

But it wasn't until seven months later, when the celebrity gossip website TMZ posted an online video, that people saw exactly how ferocious the blow was.

It cost Rice his job and his paycheck --- but not his wife.

Here is a timeline of key events in the story.

TMZ: Someone from NFL saw Rice tape Outrage over Ray Rice's suspension

February 15: Ray Rice and his then-fiancee, Janay Palmer, are involved in an early-morning fight on an elevator in an Atlantic City, New Jersey, casino. Atlantic City police say Rice and Palmer struck each other with their hands and refused medical treatment at the scene.
Ray Rice: 'I apologize to my wife' Rice's wife defends him, criticizes media
They are arrested and taken to the Atlantic City Police Department holding facility. Each is charged with simple assault.

February 19: TMZ releases video of Rice dragging Palmer out of the elevator in which the incident occurred.

February 21: Baltimore Ravens Head Coach John Harbaugh speaks at the NFL combine about Rice's arrest: "There are a lot of facts and a process that has to be worked through in anything like this. There are a lot of question marks. But Ray's character, you guys know his character. So you start with that."

March 5: Harbaugh tells reporters that Rice and Palmer will be attending a couples' seminar. He further defends Rice: "Ray has told me his side of it, and everything we've seen so far is very consistent with what he said."

March 27: Rice is indicted by an Atlantic County grand jury on a charge of third-degree aggravated assault. The charge against Palmer is dropped. The Ravens issue a statement: "This is part of the due process for Ray. We know there is more to Ray Rice than this one incident."

March 28: Rice and Palmer marry.

May 1: Rice pleads not guilty to aggravated assault and applies for a program for first-time offenders that could clear him of charges in one year.

May 20: Rice is accepted into the diversionary program.

May 23: The Ravens hold a news conference with Rice and Palmer. Rice apologizes for "the situation my wife and I were in." The Ravens live-tweet the event, including one that reads, "Janay Rice says she deeply regrets the role that she played the night of the incident." That tweet has since been deleted.

June 16: NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell meets with Rice and Palmer at league headquarters in New York.

July 24: The NFL announces a two-game suspension for Rice, starting August 30. Ravens general manager Ozzie Newsome calls the punishment "significant" but "fair."

July 28: Rice receives a standing ovation from fans at a Ravens training camp practice.

July 31: Rice tells reporters at a Ravens news conference that the violent incident is not representative of who he is. "You know that's not me," he says. "You know that's something I have to live ... with the rest of my life." Rice calls his actions "inexcusable."

August 1: Goodell addresses the media for the first time after Rice's suspension while in Canton, Ohio, for the Pro Football Hall of Fame ceremonies. He defends his decision: "I take into account all of the information before I make a decision on what the discipline will be. In this case, there was no discipline by the criminal justice system. They put him in that diversionary program."

August 28: Amid criticism for Rice's punishment, the NFL announces a new, harsher policy for domestic violence and other violent conduct. The penalty for a first offense is a six-game ban under the personal conduct policy, with longer bans for extenuating circumstances. League employees, including players, who commit a second offense will be banned for life. In a letter, Goodell admits that he got the Rice punishment wrong, without mentioning him by name. "My disciplinary decision led the public to question our sincerity, our commitment, and whether we understood the toll that domestic violence inflicts on so many families. I take responsibility both for the decision and for ensuring that our actions in the future properly reflect our values. I didn't get it right. Simply put, we have to do better. And we will."

September 8: TMZ releases surveillance footage from inside the elevator showing Rice punching Palmer. Hours later, the Ravens terminate Rice's contract and Goodell announces Rice's indefinite suspension from the NFL. The leagues claims it had not seen the video from the elevator's interior until Monday. Coach Harbaugh speaks to reporters: "It's something we saw for the first time today, well all of us. It changed things, of course. And it made things a little bit different." "We had a meeting. It was not a long meeting. We came to the decision that we came to release Ray, and that's what we did. I had a chance to talk to Ray, along with Ozzie (Newsome) this afternoon, after we did it.
"I have nothing but hope and goodwill for Ray and Janay. And we'll do whatever we can going forward to help them as they go forward and try to make the best of it."

September 9: Janay Rice apparently posts a statement on Instagram, talking about the "horrible nightmare" and how she feels like she's "mourning the death of a friend."

September 9: TMZ reports the NFL never contacted the casino to request video. Brian McCarthy, NFL vice president of corporate communications, issues this statement to CNN: "Security for Atlantic City casinos is handled by the New Jersey State Police. Any videos related to an ongoing criminal investigation are held in the custody of the state police. As we said yesterday: We requested from law enforcement any and all information about the incident, including the video from inside the elevator. That video was not made available to us."

September 9: Rice texts CNN's Rachel Nichols this message: "I'm just holding strong for my wife and kid that's all I can do right now."

September 10: The Associated Press reports that a law enforcement official tells them he sent a DVD with a copy of the elevator video to an NFL office in April and on April 9 he received a voice mail acknowledging the video was received. It appears one person watched it. "You're right. It's terrible," the caller says, according to the AP.

September 10: CBS News airs interview with Goodell in which he says he cannot rule out Ray Rice never playing in the NFL again.

September 10: Goodell sends memos to NFL owners that says the league asked law enforcement officials for the video from inside the elevator on multiple occasions but releasing evidence from an ongoing criminal investigation was illegal in New Jersey.


Most recent Tweets from NBA player Paul George (he's removed them since):

quote:
I don't condone hittin women or think it's coo BUT if SHE ain't trippin then I ain't trippin.. Lets keep it movin lol let that man play!


quote:
If you in a relationship and a woman hit you first and attacking YOU.. Then you obviously ain't beatin HER. Homie made A bad choice! #StayUp


The circus continues..
Scoops
Goodall is going down.....


Ray Rice was a poster boy for the NFL's stance its anti-bullying campaign and Goodall was trying to protect one of his players....
Halcyon+On+On
Obviously he is in the wrong for hitting her, even if she instigated . But we'll see if she sticks around with his unemployed ass...
Spacey Orange
Hi-tech lynching.
OrangestO
quote:
Originally posted by Halcyon+On+On
Obviously he is in the wrong for hitting her, even if she instigated . But we'll see if she sticks around with his unemployed ass...


Hitting her? Or hitting her that way.

What if she instigated by punching him? Supposedly she spit on him before they entered the elevator.

What's the line between domestic violence and self defense? Is there one?

I'm not saying what he did is right at all, and I'm not asking with his case in mind.
Halcyon+On+On
They were probably both drunk. He is (was*) paid a lot of money to be pretty ing physical for a living though- this is not a non-factor in this case, and it isn't a non-factor in almost every domestic abuse case, where men absolutely overpower women 90% of the time. Yes, abuse can go both ways, but it's not merely a metric of incidence, but aggravation.

Is there a line at all? It's almost always situational, so the line is arbitrated by the law, and people on either side fall through the cracks. Way of the world sometimes. We legislate on averages.
Joss Weatherby
And people call the Seahawks thugs. :rolleyes:
Jon_Snow
I blame Solange
Spacey Orange
typical double standard. no one says anything about her hitting him.
enydo
If that is what you get out of this ordeal that's pretty pathetic.

Spacey Orange
She instigates it, gets the short end and only he faces criminal sanctions and loses his job, and probably his only means of making a living. How the is pointing this out pathetic? the NFL. They can suck dick the hypocritical two-faced bastards. I'm sure he'll get to play in some European league.
enydo
And the systemic oppression and devaluation of women that makes things like this commonplace, and presumably acceptable as long as nobody sees it (especially in the nfl), factors into thaaaaaaaat where?
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