| 
		
		
		 NFL 
		security chief says he never received Ray Rice video 
		 Send a link to a friend 
		[September 26, 2014] 
		(Reuters) - The security chief for 
		the National Football League said on Thursday he never received the 
		video of former Baltimore Ravens star Ray Rice punching his fiancée, 
		after a news report said it had been sent directly to him in April. | 
		
            | 
			 "I unequivocally deny that I received at any time a copy of the 
			video and I had not watched it until it was made public on September 
			8," Jeffrey Miller said in a statement. 
 Miller was responding to an Associated Press report on Thursday 
			quoting an unnamed law enforcement source who said the video had 
			been addressed to Miller. Two weeks ago, that same source had said 
			he sent the package to the NFL, but did not allow the AP to report 
			who he addressed it to.
 
 The report could complicate matters for the NFL as it struggles to 
			regain its credibility for its handling of the Rice case and four 
			other domestic abuse incidents, amounting to one of the biggest 
			scandals in America's most-popular sports league.
 
 
			
			 
			The elevator security video of Rice knocking his now-wife Janay Rice 
			unconscious surfaced on TMZ.com on Sept. 8, prompting NFL 
			Commissioner Roger Goodell to indefinitely suspend Rice from the 
			league after initially giving him a lighter punishment of a two-game 
			suspension for the domestic violence incident.
 
 Goodell has said he had not seen the video either until it became 
			public, but he called an independent investigation into how the NFL 
			handled the Rice case after the first AP report two weeks ago.
 
 The release of the Rice video unleashed a wave of criticism against 
			the NFL from sponsors, fans, commentators and women's groups and 
			raised questions about Goodell's leadership and why the NFL wasn't 
			able to obtain the clip before TMZ.
 
            [to top of second column] | 
      
		
		 Before handing down the two-game ban to Rice, Goodell had seen an 
			earlier video showing Rice dragging his unconscious fiancée from the 
			elevator.
 Goodell has apologized for his initial lighter punishment and has 
			increased the ban on players who commit domestic violence to a 
			minimum of six games.
 
 (Reporting by Mary Milliken in Los Angeles; Editing by Eric Beech)
 
			[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
			reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			 
			
			 |