Crime & Safety

NFL Orders Former FBI Director to Oversee Investigation into Rice Case

The investigation comes after conflicting reports around the video of former Ravens running back Ray Rice assaulting his then-fiancee.

The former director of the FBI will handle an investigation into the handling of the Ray Rice case, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said Wednesday.

The announcement came after the Associated Press reported that a law enforcement official had sent a video of former Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice assaulting his then-fiancee inside an Atlantic City elevator, and its receipt was confirmed from an NFL office in April.

It also comes after State Sen. President Stephen Sweeney called upon Acting Attorney General John Hoffman to investigate the the handling of the case.On Wednesday night, Atlantic County Prosecutor Jim McClain said Rice wouldn’t have faced jail time even if he had been prosecuted because he was charged with a third-degree crime as opposed to a second-degree crime.

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Goodell had previously said that nobody to his knowledge in the NFL had seen the video that TMZ Sports released Monday showing what happened in the elevator—that Rice knocked out his then-fiancee on Feb. 15.

The Associated Press was given access to a 12-second voicemail from an NFL office number in which a woman confirmed receipt of the video and said: “You’re right; it’s terrible,”according to the report.

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Goodell and the NFL said that nobody there was aware of the video.

“...we did not see video of what took place inside the elevator until it was publicly released on Monday,” Goodell said in a letter Wednesday to NFL executives. “When the new video evidence became available, we acted promptly and imposed an indefinite suspension on Mr. Rice.” Rice was alsocut from the Ravens.

Goodell added that as long as Rice is in a pretrial intervention program for the third-degree assault charge he faces in New Jersey, the evidence involved in the case is not accessible to the public. He added that the NFL’s “longstanding policy” has been “to cooperate with law enforcement and take no action to interfere with the criminal justice system.”

The NFL denied the claim from the Associated Press as well, stating: “We have no knowledge of this. We are not aware of anyone in our office who possessed or saw the video before it was made public on Monday. We will look into it.”

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