NFL suspensions case moves back to state court

MINNEAPOLIS — A judge said Tuesday he’ll move quickly but carefully as he takes up a lawsuit by Minnesota Vikings Kevin Williams and Pat Williams, who are fighting their four-game suspensions for their use of a banned substance.

MINNEAPOLIS — A judge said Tuesday he’ll move quickly but carefully as he takes up a lawsuit by Minnesota Vikings Kevin Williams and Pat Williams, who are fighting their four-game suspensions for their use of a banned substance. As the fight moved from federal court to state court, Hennepin County District Judge Gary Larson asked for and got assurances from NFL attorneys Joseph Schmitt and Dan Nash that no immediate action will be taken against the Williamses ahead of the season. One of the complicated legal issues he needs to decide is whether any temporary restraining order against the suspensions remains in place. "I’ll move expeditiously. … But I’m also going to do it in a very deliberate fashion," Larson said. NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said afterward that the league still intends to impose the suspensions at the start of the regular season. As is standard procedure, he said, suspensions that take effect in the regular season do not prevent players from participating in preseason activities. The Williamses, who are not related, tested positive last year for a banned drug that can mask the use of steroids, though they are not accused of taking steroids. They took the weight-loss supplement StarCaps, which contained the diuretic bumetanide, which wasn’t listed on the label. The NFL has acknowledged it knew StarCaps contained the banned drug, and the players say the NFL wrongly failed to share that information. U.S. District Judge Paul Magnuson last week dismissed most of the Williamses’ lawsuit but sent the case back to state court to resolve two remaining claims under Minnesota laws. Magnuson denied a request from the NFL Players Association to keep the suspensions of the two Vikings and three New Orleans Saints players on hold while the union and NFL appeal different parts of his decision. Larson told both sides to file briefs addressing two disputed issues that need to be addressed relatively soon: whether any order blocking the suspensions remains in force and whether he even has jurisdiction to hear the case. The last of the briefs is due June 22. Peter Ginsberg, the lawyer for the Williamses, argued that the temporary restraining order Larson issued when the two players originally filed their lawsuit last December, and that Magnuson kept in place after the case was transferred to federal court, was never lifted. Schmitt and Nash argued that Magnuson’s order last week canceled that injunction. Larson didn’t express an opinion on which side was right on that point, which affects whether the Williamses will be eligible to play in the first game of the regular season on Sept. 13. Ginsberg told the judge his clients are eager to go to trial as soon as possible on the remaining claims in their lawsuit, which involve state laws on when and how employers can require their employees to submit to drug testing and prohibiting employers from disciplining employees for using a legal substance offsite during nonworking hours. But Schmitt urged Larson to stay the proceedings until the NFL’s federal court appeal is resolved. The league says Magnuson should have dismissed those two claims instead of sending them to state court. Schmitt acknowledged that the appeals process could take at least several months but said it made no sense to have proceedings taking place in the case in federal and state courts at the same time that could produce conflicting results. The players union plans its own federal appeal on the claims that Magnuson dismissed against the Williamses and New Orleans Saints Charles Grant and Will Smith, plus Deuce McAllister, who was released by New Orleans after last season but hopes to find a team for the upcoming season. The Williamses have not decided whether to file a federal appeal themselves, Ginsberg said. ______ In photo: This is a May 29, 2009 file photo showing Minnesota Vikings defensive tackles Pat Williams (94) and Kevin Williams (93) participating in a full-squad mini-camp in Eden Prairie, Minn. (AP Photo/Jim Mone, File) Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

About Post Author

Comments

From the Web

Skip to content