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Brett Favre Faces Sexual Harassment Lawsuit

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  • Brett Favre Faces Sexual Harassment Lawsuit


    In the wake of a sex scandal that tarnished Brett Favre's storied 20-year NFL career and cost him a a $50,000 fine, two more women have come forward, filing a sexual harassment suit against the star quarterback.

    Christina Scavo and Shannon O'Toole, both former massage therapists for the New York Jets, filed suit against Favre, the New York Jets and Lisa Ripi, a woman who hires massage therapists for the team, in the Supreme Court of the State of New York today.

    The New York Jets and the National Football League had no comment on the matter. Requests for comment from Brett Favre's agent and the Minnesota Vikings were not immediately returned.

    In the suit, Scavo alleges that Favre sent text messages to another unidentified massage therapist, asking Scavo and the unidentified woman to "get together" with Favre.

    Scavo said that in 2008 while Favre was with the New York Jets, he treated her like a "hanging slab of meat." In the suit she claims he wanted a three-way with her and another therapist.

    Favre allegedly texted the unidentified therapist, writing, "Brett here, you and Crissy want to get together, I'm all alone," according to the lawsuit.

    Favre allegedly sent another text message reading, "Kinda lonely tonight, I guess I have bad intentions."

    Scavo claimed that after she refused Favre's advances and had her husband, Joseph Scavo, call Favre to demand an apology, both Scavo and the other plaintiff, Shannon O'Toole, were never offered work with the Jets again.

    Scavo's husband said he confronted the quarterback to stop soliciting his wife and asked for an apology, but Favre "responded in an inappropriate manner and refused," according to the lawsuit.

    Joseph Scavo claimed that his wife then came under fire from her boss, Lisa Ripi, a defendant in the lawsuit. The suit alleges that Ripi wrote "for sure feel horrible that u had to go thru that [with] a pervert...however I truly wish you would've come forward at the time it happened."

    Ripi goes on to say, "I've been up there 13 years without anything that happened to me on tmz...cause it was handled internally the way it should be," according to the lawsuit.

    Elizabeth Eilender, the attorney for Scavo and O'Toole, said that her clients did not want to file a lawsuit, but when the Jets refused to give them back their jobs, they had no choice.

    The suit alleges that the Jets' locker room and training camp are "a hot bed of sexual harassment, sexism and inappropriate behavior."

    They describe the majority of the team's massage therapists as young women.

    "I suspect that this case is only the tip of the iceberg with respect to the harassment and discrimination experienced by women working for NFL teams and their players as well as all of men's professional sports. I hope that Ms. Scavo's and Ms. O'Toole's courage to bring this suit will empower other women to come forward without fear of retaliation and retribution in order to protect their livelihoods and self-respect," Eilender said in a statement to ABC News.

    Favre was under investigation by the NFL from October of 2010 until late December of last year after the website Deadspin first posted voicemails allegedly from Favre to Jenn Sterger, a former game day reporter for the New York Jets. The voicemails and pictures were allegedly sent to Sterger in 2008 when both were working for the Jets.

    In the voicemails, Favre is heard inviting Sterger to his hotel. Favre has admitted to leaving the voicemails but not to sending inappropriate pictures of himself.

    The NFL concluded its investigation Dec. 29, 2010 by fining Favre $50,000. The fine drew the ire of some critics who said the punishment wasn't harsh enough. Favre reportedly makes $50,000 in just five minutes of game time. His base salary is $11.6 million.

    The league said that Commissioner Roger Goodell "could not conclude" that Favre violated the NFL's personal conduct policy given the evidence available to him.

    Officials from the league said that forensic evidence gathered during the nearly three-month investigation did not establish that Favre sent the objectionable photographs to Sterger.

    "This has been a messy story from the get-go ... and it's a messy ending to the story. I don't know if anybody is happy with it except maybe Brett Favre, who has gotten away ... with a slap on the wrist," ABC News sports contributor Christine Brennan said on "Good Morning America" when the fine was announced.

    The fine was intended to reprimand Favre for not being "candid in several respects during the investigation, resulting in a longer review and additional negative public attention," the league said.

    "Brett Favre not cooperating, that's significant, that's not just a little laugh-it-off kind of thing," Brennan said. "Why didn't Roger Goodell, who is a get-tough commissioner, why didn't he suspend Brett Favre for the presumably final game of his career [and] send a big statement to NFL players that this is unacceptable?"

    The NFL said it had reviewed media reports that Favre had made passes at two massage therapists who worked for the New York Jets, but that "people with relevant information" refused to be interviewed. It appears those people have now come forward with the lawsuit.

    The Jets as a team have also been in hot water for allegedly cat calling Ines Sainz, a Mexican sideline reporter for TV Azteca, in September of 2010.

    Sainz called the Jets' locker room an "uncomfortable" environment for a woman.

    Meanwhile, Favre, who was sidelined by injury in the Minnesota Vikings' final game of the season on Sunday, said that he is retiring from the field for good. He's retired twice before but then come back to the game.

    Source: ABC News

  • #2
    Brett Favre is not liable under the Penile Code.

    Comment


    • #3
      “Want to get together? I’m all alone”. How horrific it must have been to read those words. I hope Favre is thrown in jail for that. Or at the very least, I hope some woman calls Favre on the phone and says “Hi Brett, I’m all alone, want to get together?”, just so he can see how it feels to be treated like that.

      This is ironic, because just yesterday I went to Arby’s and ordered a classic roast beef sandwich. The guy behind the counter asked if I wanted fries with that. I am thinking of suing him for sexual harrasment.
      Last edited by Sodomy; 01-03-2011, 6:06 PM.

      Comment


      • #4
        It took them two years to figure out that it’s sexual harassment? Sounds like it also took a lawyer to convince them.

        The lawyer wants money, so he convinces someone that they’ve been wronged, and tells them to sue. I get it.

        Comment


        • #5
          Really?!?!?

          This story is pathetic and is the main reason why people hate lawyers. A couple of ambulance-chasing losers from NY just had to take this case on contingency. I have read the complaint and there is no viable claims. Favre texting a woman that he is lonely and wants to hang out means nothing. What’s more, these women were part-time workers in training camp. Once the team moved its headquarters, it did not require their services anymore.

          Think about this, why would they wait until now to come out with this if they had been fired in 2008? Are we really expected to believe that they were awaiting the NFL to do something to Favre? And who keeps text messages for two years? I know who, someone who wants to blackmail someone else. My final issue with the complaint is that the attorneys act like the Jets are the only team who has men who like women. Go to any locker room in America and add a scantily clad woman and you can be sure there will be some comments/looks. Let’s just end this witch hunt of the Jets before it begins because its a waste of time and energy.

          Comment

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