letekro
Experienced Starter w/First Big Contract
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2005
- Messages
- 5,930
- Reaction score
- 1,667
Just to take the first example. You are saying this is a lie:
"Unknown to Anderson, and without Anderson?s permission or the
permission of any other member of the officiating crew, McNally had taken the
balls from the Officials Locker Room towards the playing field."
But what support do you have for any of this being a lie? I'm sorry, but I want to understand what it is you're saying.
Is your point about Daniels that, it is irrelevant whether Daniels (or anyone else) gave McNally permission to take the balls, because no one cared whether McNally took the balls (which seems likely)? I mean, this makes more sense than what Wells is saying, but Wells is working for the NFL, so all of the inferences he draws from the facts support the NFL's position. Drawing inferences in favor of the NFL is not lying, its lawyering.
"Unknown to Anderson, and without Anderson?s permission or the
permission of any other member of the officiating crew, McNally had taken the
balls from the Officials Locker Room towards the playing field."
But what support do you have for any of this being a lie? I'm sorry, but I want to understand what it is you're saying.
Is your point about Daniels that, it is irrelevant whether Daniels (or anyone else) gave McNally permission to take the balls, because no one cared whether McNally took the balls (which seems likely)? I mean, this makes more sense than what Wells is saying, but Wells is working for the NFL, so all of the inferences he draws from the facts support the NFL's position. Drawing inferences in favor of the NFL is not lying, its lawyering.











