Ray Rice knocks out wife cold video

fatdaddycool

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Look Iin no way agree with his actions and like what was said earlier he looked far to comfortable doing what he did. That said, since when does one human being have to pay a higher price than another for the same offense. People are fucked up. People commit lascivious acts but why does he deserve to be without the ability to earn a living in the career field he worked his entire life to become. He hit a woman, I've never done it nor would I, but I know plenty of them that probably needed it at one time or another. How the fuck does a football player have more social responsibility than a cop that shoots an unarmed man six times when his job is to protect them? People need to get a grip. It's domestic violence and it happens every minute of the day and every single person that ever got convicted of it got to keep their job but him. Personally, I truly don't give a fuck either way if he ever plays again. I also don't care if payton manning gives to charity or if Tom Brady changes his hair style or if Ray Carruth gets life in prison. They're fucking athletes, nothing more, you people are the ones that look upon them as heroes or role models. Again, I don't condone his actions but you either have a fucking justice system or you don't. That system is to be applied equitably across the board.
To say he should have this done or that done to him other than a fair and equitable punishment is ridiculous. You people act as if your favorite players are highly responsible, pillars of society. They aren't. They're fucking football players, big deal.
 

yyz

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Look Iin no way agree with his actions and like what was said earlier he looked far to comfortable doing what he did. That said, since when does one human being have to pay a higher price than another for the same offense. People are fucked up. People commit lascivious acts but why does he deserve to be without the ability to earn a living in the career field he worked his entire life to become. He hit a woman, I've never done it nor would I, but I know plenty of them that probably needed it at one time or another. How the fuck does a football player have more social responsibility than a cop that shoots an unarmed man six times when his job is to protect them? People need to get a grip. It's domestic violence and it happens every minute of the day and every single person that ever got convicted of it got to keep their job but him. Personally, I truly don't give a fuck either way if he ever plays again. I also don't care if payton manning gives to charity or if Tom Brady changes his hair style or if Ray Carruth gets life in prison. They're fucking athletes, nothing more, you people are the ones that look upon them as heroes or role models. Again, I don't condone his actions but you either have a fucking justice system or you don't. That system is to be applied equitably across the board.
To say he should have this done or that done to him other than a fair and equitable punishment is ridiculous. You people act as if your favorite players are highly responsible, pillars of society. They aren't. They're fucking football players, big deal.


Plenty of people lose their jobs over domestic violence. It's not always about being held to a higher standard, it's sometimes just part of what you agree to when you sign up to work for someone. The NFL is one of those employers. They have a morals clause in the contract of every player, just so they can cut them loose, as they did Ray Rice.
 

hedgehog

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http://espn.go.com/nfl/story/_/id/1...ends-ray-rice-criticizes-media-instagram-post

A day after a new video surfaced showing Ray Rice hitting his then-fianc?e in the face in a hotel elevator, prompting the Baltimore Ravens to release the running back and the NFL to increase his suspension from two games to indefinite, Janay Rice defended her husband and criticized the media.

"I woke up this morning, feeling like I had a horrible nightmare, feeling like I'm mourning the death of my closest friend," Janay Rice wrote in an Instagram post. "But to have to accept the fact that it's reality is a nightmare itself. No one know the pain that the media & unwanted options from the public has caused my family. To make us relive a moment in our lives that we regret everyday is a horrible thing.

"To take something away from the man I love that he has worked his ass off for all his life just to gain ratings is horrific. THIS IS OUR LIFE! What don't you all get. If your intentions were to hurt us, embarrass us, make us feel alone, take all happines away, you've succeeded on so many levels. Just know you've succeeded on so many levels. Just know we will continue to grow & show the world what real love is! Ravensnation we love you!"

More from ESPN.com

Jason Whitlock writes that NFL commissioner Roger Goodell failed drastically in his handling of the Ray Rice incident. Story

Don't applaud the Ravens for finally releasing Ray Rice, because it was an overdue move, Jamison Hensley writes. Story

Even if Goodell keeps his job, his legacy is forever tarnished. Story

A Timeline of the NFL and Ravens' Reactions to Ray Rice Incident

TMZ Sports, which released the video on Monday on its website, said earlier Tuesday that sources connected with the Revel Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City told it no one from the NFL asked the casino for the video of Rice in the elevator from the Feb. 15 incident. Instead, the league relied on previously released video that showed Janay Palmer (now Janay Rice) being dragged from the elevator after being hit.

A Revel spokesman told ABC News that the casino did make a copy of the elevator surveillance video for police.

In a statement Tuesday, the NFL said, "Security for Atlantic City casinos is handled by the New Jersey State Police. Any videos related to an ongoing criminal investigation are held in the custody of the state police. As we said yesterday: We requested from law enforcement any and all information about the incident, including the video from inside the elevator. That video was not made available to us."

In response to inquiries from ABC News, the New Jersey State Police said the statement from the NFL cannot be accurate.

"Investigations of incidents on the casino floor are handled by the NJSP, but this occurred in the elevator and was handled by the (Atlantic City Police Department)," a NJSP spokesman said. "We never had the video."

The Ravens said Monday that they never saw the new video released Monday by TMZ Sports, either. Asked why the team wasn't able to view the video sooner, head coach John Harbaugh told reporters at a Monday night news conference: "I don't know why that would be a hard thing to understand. It wasn't available. It wasn't there for us. It wasn't something that we ever saw or had access to."

The Associated Press reported Monday night that it had viewed a higher-quality video provided by a law enforcement official, and that Rice and Palmer could be heard shouting obscenities at each other. According to the AP, after she collapses, he drags her out of the elevator and is met by some hotel staff. One of them can be heard saying, "She's drunk, right?" And then, "No cops." Rice doesn't respond.

The video, which is slightly longer than the TMZ version and includes some audio, was shown to the AP on condition of anonymity because the official isn't authorized to release it.

The Ravens reached their decision to release Rice in a quick meeting between Harbaugh, owner Steve Bisciotti, general manager Ozzie Newsome and team president Dick Cass, according to Harbaugh.

"The Baltimore Ravens terminated the contract of RB Ray Rice this afternoon," the team's terse statement read.

Bisciotti first saw the video on his television and decided almost immediately that he believed Rice had to be released, a source told ESPN's Ed Werder. Bisciotti called a meeting to confer with other members of the organizational hierarchy. Newsome called Rice to inform him of the team's decision. Harbaugh also spoke to Rice, while Bisciotti contacted NFL commissioner Roger Goodell.

The source said that Rice admitted to the Ravens from the start that he was guilty of striking Janay and, for the most part, accurately described what they eventually saw on the videotape. But the brutality of the assault when seen on the security videotape made a different impression.

"His description was not too much different -- except it looks more violent when you see it," a team source said. "He's a likable guy, and he's done so many things the right way in his career, but he's paying for what he did and the fact there was a video. You can't erase the video."

The source insisted the Ravens had requested copies of the video through multiple sources without success. At one point, a police officer who had seen the video described what it contained to Ravens officials.

"We hadn't seen the video," the source said. "The video changes the perspective."

The NFL suspended Rice for two games in July for domestic violence, a punishment that at the time received widespread criticism in different circles.

"We requested from law enforcement any and all information about the incident, including the video from inside the elevator," NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said Monday morning. "That video was not made available to us and no one in our office has seen it until today."

A spokesperson for the Atlantic County, New Jersey, Prosecutor's Office told ESPN's Don Van Natta on Monday: "Mr. Rice received the same treatment in the court system that any first-time offender in similar circumstances has received. We have no comment beyond that."

Rice's lawyer, Michael Diamondstein, declined to comment when contacted by The Associated Press.

Rice, 27, was charged with felony aggravated assault in the case, but in May he was accepted into a pretrial intervention program that allowed him to avoid jail time and could lead to the charge being purged from his record. Rice hasn't spoken often to the media since his arrest, but on July 31 he called his actions "inexcusable" and said this is "something I have to live with the rest of my life."

He added: "I know that's not who I am as a man. That's not who my mom raised me to be. If anybody knows me, they know I was raised by a single parent, and that was my mother. I let her down, I let my wife down, I let my daughter down. I let my wife's parents down. I let the whole Baltimore community down. I let my teammates down. I let so many people down because of 30 seconds of my life that I know I can't take back."

Monday, teams were notified that any contract with Rice would not be approved or take effect until further direction is provided by Goodell, a league source told ESPN NFL Insider Adam Schefter.

The executive director of the NFL Players Association, DeMaurice Smith, told SI.com that the video is disturbing and jarring.

"The video is really all the information I've seen. I did learn on the way over to the facility about Mr. Rice being released, and have not yet talked to Roger [Goodell] about any other discipline," Smith said, according to the report. "I did hear that [Rice had been suspended], but I tend to rely on the commissioner and learning all the facts first-hand. That's what we'll do, and once we know what those facts are, that will dictate our next steps."

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
 

JT

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Mar 28, 2000
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Just another reason why I am down in general over the NFL/football. Didn't watch one game all weekend and didn't care. Someone smokes some reefer and gets banned more games then smashing a woman cold. Fuck that shit and fuck you NFL. I'm sure the monolith will keep growing and growing regardless. Being the old fuck that I am i'll stick with baseball even with it's many problems present and past.
 
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