Panthers owner to sell team amid misconduct allegations
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[December 18, 2017]
(Reuters) - Carolina Panthers
owner Jerry Richardson announced on Sunday he will sell the team,
hours after the National Football League said it had taken over an
investigation into allegations of workplace misconduct by the owner.
"I believe that it is time to turn the franchise over to new
ownership," Richardson said in a statement on the team's website.
"Therefore, I will put the team up for sale at the end of this NFL
season."
Richardson's announcement comes just two days after the Panthers
said an internal investigation was being conducted by the team into
the allegations. It would not comment on the nature of the
accusations.
On Sunday, NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said in an email to Reuters
that the league would conduct the investigation.
While declining to comment on the nature of the allegations, the
team said on Friday it was "committed to ensuring a safe,
comfortable and diverse work environment where all individuals,
regardless of sex, race, color, religion, gender, or sexual identity
or orientation, are treated fairly and equally."
Within hours of Richardson's announcement, rap star Sean "Diddy"
Combs and Golden State Warriors basketball guard Stephen Curry
expressed interest in buying the Panthers.
"I will be the best NFL owner that you can imagine," Combs said in a
video posted on Instagram. His net worth is estimated by Forbes at
around $820 million.
"There are no majority African American NFL owners. Let’s make
history," Combs added on Twitter, to which Charlotte-raised Curry
replied: "I want in."
Curry, 29, is a two-times NBA most valuable player and has been a
member of two championship-winning Golden State teams.
Sports Illustrated magazine reported on Sunday that at least four
former employees have received monetary settlements due to
inappropriate workplace comments and conduct by Richardson,
including sexually suggestive language and behavior and use of a
racial slur.
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Carolina Panthers owner Jerry Richardson walks on the field before
Super Bowl 50 against the Denver Broncos at Levi's Stadium.
Mandatory Credit: Matthew Emmons-USA TODAY Sports / Reuters Picture
Supplied by Action Images
The magazine did not name the sources cited in the story but the
settlements involved nondisclosure clauses.
Reuters could not independently verify the information.
Richardson, 81 and a former NFL player, has been a majority owner of
the Charlotte-based team since it began playing in the NFL as an
expansion franchise in 1995.
The Panthers said on Friday that law firm Quinn Emanuel Urquhart and
Sullivan would lead the internal investigation, and that former
White House chief of staff Erskine Bowles, a minority team owner,
would oversee it.
The Panthers had urged the league on Sunday to take over the probe,
and the NFL agreed to it, NFL.com reported.
Carolina beat the Green Bay Packers 31-24 at home on Sunday to
improve to 10-4 with two games left in the regular season.
"There has been no greater mission or purpose in my life than to
bring an NFL franchise to Charlotte," Richardson said in his
statement.
He added that the sale of the Panthers, who joined the NFL in 1995,
would not begin until the last game of the season had been played.
(Reporting by Gene Cherry in Salvo, North Carolina and Andrew Both
in Cary, North Carolina; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe/Peter
Rutherford/Amlan Chakraborty)
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