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Barack Obama 'shocked' by Ray Rice video as pressure mounts on Goodell | |
(about 2 hours later) | |
President Barack Obama was “shocked” by a video of the former Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice punching his then fiancee in the face, a senior White House aide said on Sunday. The aide’s words added to growing pressure on the NFL commissioner, Roger Goodell, to resign. | |
The video, shot in an Atlantic City casino in February, was released by the website TMZ on Monday. Rice, who did not contest a charge of aggravated assault against Janay Palmer, who is now his wife, was initially fined and banned by the league for two regular-season games. That decision prompted widespread criticism of the NFL and a revision of the league’s suspensions policy regarding such cases. | |
After the release of the video from the elevator, Rice was released by the Ravens and suspended indefinitely by the NFL. On Thursday, Baltimore’s first game since the ban attracted expressions of support from fans and a 108% boost in ratings for the broadcaster CBS. On Saturday, Rice and his wife attended a football game at his high school, in New Rochelle, New York. | |
“The president was shocked by what he saw, let’s put it that way,” said the White House chief of staff, Denis McDonough, during an appearance on NBC that was part of a tour of Sunday talkshows to discuss attempts to build a coalition against Isis militants. | |
The NFL has endured a difficult week, under pressure over what it knew about the Rice tape and when and fielding calls for Goodell to resign. On Friday, the Minnesota Vikings running back Adrian Peterson was indicted on charges of child abuse, relating to the beating of his four-year-old son. Peterson was released on bail on Saturday, after turning himself in to Texas police. | |
On Sunday, the defensive end Greg Hardy was deactivated by the Carolina Panthers. Hardy, who is appealing against a guilty verdict handed down in July for assaulting and threatening an ex-girlfriend, played in the Panthers’ season opener. The San Francisco 49ers defensive end Ray McDonald, who was arrested, jailed and bailed in August over an allegation of assaulting his fiancee, had not been deactivated. The 49ers were due to face the Chicago Bears on Sunday evening. | |
McDonough did not comment on the NFL’s handling of the Rice case. He said: “I think we all know that Ray Rice being suspended indefinitely seems to be exactly the right thing.” | |
The Minnesota senator Amy Klobuchar, however, who this week wrote to Goodell to demand a “zero tolerance” policy on cases of domestic violence, questioned whether the league’s response to the Rice case had involved “any cover-up” or “any lies”. | |
The Democrat, one of 14 Democratic and two Republican women senators who signed the letter to Goodell, said: “I want to see if there is any cover-up, if there are any lies. There are many situations in which he should step down. But I want to see the evidence, what the facts are.” | The Democrat, one of 14 Democratic and two Republican women senators who signed the letter to Goodell, said: “I want to see if there is any cover-up, if there are any lies. There are many situations in which he should step down. But I want to see the evidence, what the facts are.” |
Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, another signatory to the open letter, told CBS that if Goodell had lied about when the league saw the second tape, “then he has to step down because he won’t have the force of authority to change how they address these issues”. | |
Klobuchar was appearing on CNN’s State of the Union talkshow alongside Mike Wise, a Washington Post sports columnist. Asked about the NFL’s handling of the Rice case, she said: “First of all, I’m a former prosecutor and I think what you need to do is look at all the evidence and all the facts. | |
“I think Robert Mueller [the former FBI director appointed to investigate the NFL’s handling of the Rice case] is a good man and hopefully he will get all the facts out, because I have a feeling there are a lot of people who know stuff about what went on here. | |
“You have a situation where a man knocked a woman out cold in an elevator. There’s a tape that clearly shows what happened. I think most employers would look for all the evidence, [and] give a temporary suspension while they were looking at the evidence. | |
“But the fact that they gave only a two-game suspension and then turned around in public and said, ‘Oh, we made a mistake, we’re going to let him go,’ I think that’s problematic for the NFL … concerning about how they handle these kinds of cases.” | “But the fact that they gave only a two-game suspension and then turned around in public and said, ‘Oh, we made a mistake, we’re going to let him go,’ I think that’s problematic for the NFL … concerning about how they handle these kinds of cases.” |
Wise was more forthright. “I’m going to jump the gun on the senator,” he said. “I think Roger Goodell does need to go. For myriad reasons, but at the very least he’s going to come out of this investigation incompetent, at the very worst maybe duplicitous and lying about what he knew about the video tape.” | |
Klobuchar also commended the Vikings for their prompt action regarding Peterson, who did not attend their game on Sunday. | Klobuchar also commended the Vikings for their prompt action regarding Peterson, who did not attend their game on Sunday. |
“I’m a big fan and I grew up with the Vikings,” said Klobuchar. “Nevertheless, this is a four-year-old child and it’s a very serious allegation. | “I’m a big fan and I grew up with the Vikings,” said Klobuchar. “Nevertheless, this is a four-year-old child and it’s a very serious allegation. |
“I am very glad that the first things that have happened here are different from the [Ray] Rice case. The Rice case didn’t happen during the season, but the Ravens didn’t do something immediately. | “I am very glad that the first things that have happened here are different from the [Ray] Rice case. The Rice case didn’t happen during the season, but the Ravens didn’t do something immediately. |
“What the Vikings have done is immediately deactivate him. He’s not playing in the game today with the [New England] Patriots, and I’m sure they’re gathering the evidence, looking at it, hearing what he has to say but mostly looking at the pictures that are out there and everything, and I’m sure they will make a decision and the prosecutor will pursue the case. | “What the Vikings have done is immediately deactivate him. He’s not playing in the game today with the [New England] Patriots, and I’m sure they’re gathering the evidence, looking at it, hearing what he has to say but mostly looking at the pictures that are out there and everything, and I’m sure they will make a decision and the prosecutor will pursue the case. |
“Again, this is a four-year-old boy.” | “Again, this is a four-year-old boy.” |