Which is not the same thing as sexually assaulting them.
It is interesting that the judge's ruling pointed out that the NFL differentiates between violent sexual assault and non-violent sexual assault.
Presumably this means physically forcing someone to have sex with you against their will, versus using other forms of power to get someone to have sex with you against their will.
Yet at the end of the day she ruled that he did commit three counts of non-violent sexual assault and it was predatory and egregious, and NFLPA did not appeal her ruling.
The reporting around Jerry Jones's party bus didn't even say anyone was having sex on the bus, it just was about how Dean Blandino was seen leaving that bus, which was seen as a NFL official who makes decisions that impact all the teams accepting favors from one owner, obviously a bad look.
NFL did fine the WFT $10M for "workplace culture" issues.
I am somewhat surprised Krafty Bob didn't get a fine for the Orchids of Asia incident. Even though the evidence did get tossed out in a court of law, there was more than enough evidence to support a case of "conduct detrimental to the integrity of and public confidence in the National Football League". I guess they figured he had more than enough public embarrassment, and it didn't serve the League's interests to make him go through another wave of such embarassment.
There's nothing in the rules about impregnating multiple women if there was consent. If there was no consent, it'd be sexual assault.
Overall, the NFL is not acting in accordance with its own statements:
One of the best arguments on behalf of Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson under the Personal Conduct Policy comes from the plain language of the document.
profootballtalk.nbcsports.com
But that doesn't forgive Watson's behavior at all. Two wrongs don't make a right.