Snyder's Commanders/Redskins in Hot Water Again

As if the sexual harassment allegations weren't enough:
Congress says Washington Commanders appear to have broken financial laws, owe money to visiting teams, season-ticket holders
The Washington Commanders failed to refund security deposits, concealed revenue and kept two sets of financial books, the House Oversight and Reform Committee alleged in a letter it sent to the Federal Trade Commission.
The 20-page letter detailed what the committee said was a multiyear process of altering records to hide revenue that led to more profits for the organization. The allegation of financial improprieties were made by former longtime employee Jason Friedman who, on March 14, met with members of the committee as part of its investigation into the team's workplace culture.
According to emails and an Excel sheet he provided to the committee, Friedman alleged the team might have retained as much as $5 million in deposits from approximately 2,000 customers.
"Quite frankly, as you go through the allegations it reads like a description of some organization out of 'The Godfather' and not an NFL football team," Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-Ill) told ESPN. He signed the letter along with the chairwoman of the committee, Rep. Carol Maloney (D-NY). "It really helps to color the culture and impunity that other witnesses have described and the evidence of severe dysfunction."
https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/337 ... et-holders
There's a ton of stuff in that article. It's like the Watson scandal. There's so many accusations that they can't all be false.
Congress says Washington Commanders appear to have broken financial laws, owe money to visiting teams, season-ticket holders
The Washington Commanders failed to refund security deposits, concealed revenue and kept two sets of financial books, the House Oversight and Reform Committee alleged in a letter it sent to the Federal Trade Commission.
The 20-page letter detailed what the committee said was a multiyear process of altering records to hide revenue that led to more profits for the organization. The allegation of financial improprieties were made by former longtime employee Jason Friedman who, on March 14, met with members of the committee as part of its investigation into the team's workplace culture.
According to emails and an Excel sheet he provided to the committee, Friedman alleged the team might have retained as much as $5 million in deposits from approximately 2,000 customers.
"Quite frankly, as you go through the allegations it reads like a description of some organization out of 'The Godfather' and not an NFL football team," Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-Ill) told ESPN. He signed the letter along with the chairwoman of the committee, Rep. Carol Maloney (D-NY). "It really helps to color the culture and impunity that other witnesses have described and the evidence of severe dysfunction."
https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/337 ... et-holders
There's a ton of stuff in that article. It's like the Watson scandal. There's so many accusations that they can't all be false.