Sports

Did NFL Have Ray Rice Video? Law Enforcement Officer Says Yes

New Associated Press report says voicemail confirms receipt of video at NFL office.

A law enforcement officer says he sent the video showing Ray Rice assaulting his then-fiancee in an Atlantic City elevator to an NFL executive’s office and had a voicemail confirming its receipt, according to the Associated Press.

If an NFL official watched the tape, that would fly in the face of NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell’s statement to CBS This Morning that “no one in the NFL” had seen the full video of what transpired inside the elevator at the Revel Casino Hotel on Feb. 15.

Video from the aftermath of the fight, in which Rice could be seen pulling his unconscious fiancee from the elevator, had previously been released by TMZ.

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Goodell issued a two-game suspension and fine for Rice.

After TMZ Sports released a second video Monday showing what happened in the elevator, Rice was cut from the Ravens and suspended indefinitely from the NFL.

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NFL officials said they had not seen the footage “until today,” according to a statement released Monday, which reported league officials requested all materials from law enforcement but were denied access due to the ongoing investigation.

TMZ, which obtained its footage from the casino, said the official police investigation ended May 20, so that material would have been available, but Goodell did not pursue it.

Even so, the claim that nobody in the NFL saw the video of the assault is on shaky ground after the Associated Press reports evidence of a 12-second voicemail from an NFL office phone to a law enforcement officer in which a woman confirmed receipt of the video and said: “You’re right; it’s terrible.”

As a result of the NFL’s handling of domestic violence, the National Organization for Women has posted a petition calling for the commissioner’s resignation and started a hashtag to promote its campaign: #ResignGoodell.

In addition, 12 Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee sent a letter to Goodell Wednesday calling for increased transparency about the Rice investigation, stating: “Given the important role the NFL and the other major professional sports leagues can play in shaping public perceptions concerning domestic violence, it would appear to be in the public interest to have the highest level of transparency associated with reviews of potential misconduct,” according to a letter published in full by USA Today.

Photo Credit: TMZ Sports/YouTube

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