patsfaninpa
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CLICK HERE to Register for a free account and login for a smoother ad-free experience. It's easy, and only takes a few moments.Assuming for the sake of argument Belichick ordered a pervasive cheating endeavor, do you honestly believe, with all the compartmentalized security (people in the Pats organization know their jobs but not the jobs of other people or groups in the organization) he would actually leave this Kaiser Sose character in a position to expose the illegal endeavor? Only if they are complete morons. Belichick may be arrogant (believe what you want about the videotaping violation-he liked doing things his way and thought the rule was stupid-he was obvious, not sneaky, in his videotaping), but he is not stupid.
The court of public opinion will never believe Belichick, not if he hooks himself to a polygraph, not if he says he has nothing to confess before being burned at the stake. Could a garden variety idiot like Walsh, a low level, video media guy who would be aware of the Rams practice schedule by virtue of media bulletins, unilaterally tape that practice in an effort to enhance his position with the organization? Uh, yeah. Don't forget the fact that the Pats played the Rams well (24-17) during the season, so where is the motivation to engage in something Belichik clearly could get caught and embarrassed doing? This ploy is not the sidelines stuff, it is the stuff that kills a team's desire to win and creates scandal right before the Superbowl. It tells a team the coach believes the team is outmatched and cannot honestly win the game. That would be stupid.
Walsh has nothing. If the Pats thought he had videos, he would likely be sued long ago for theft of team property and violation of his employment agreement. If Walsh was able to sneak these smoking gun videos out, there would be no chain of custody implicating him and he would have leaked them to the media for a big payday (and given the love of the mediots for the Pats, somebody would have paid that tab). Something about Walsh does not scream love of the NFL and its competitive balance. This guy is therefore the NFL's equivalent of Geraldo Rivera's Al Capone vault episode - a huge amount of wasted attention that will result in absolutely nothing but lost time.
He probably needs indemnity because it's not legal for his to possess these tapes. They belong to the team. You can't just take them with you if you leave the job.
What works in the PATS favor is the following:
Matt has to PROVE, PROVE, that whatever footage he has in his possession that the following occurred:
1. Prove The PATS Told him to video tape the footage
2. Prove that Bill and/or staff had knowledge of the footage
3. Prove that the Pats instructed Matt to film the footage
the Pats will easily say the following:
1. "We did not authorize this filiming by our staff"
2. "These tapes were recorded by Matt Walsh and he acted alone"
3. "The PATS had no knowledge of these tapes, nor ever granted Matt Walsh permission to record this footage.
4. No one in the PATS organization authorized nor instructed Matt to video tape this footage
5. THe PATS never knew of these tapes because they never knew Matt was recording the footage on his own....and for Mat Walsh to keep these tapes, could have been for revenge and personal gain....alal secretly record behind the PATS' back, then keep the footage to say the PATS told him to record the footage, thus keeping it for blackmail.....again, disgruntled employee...why wait 7 years? Matt is toast!
So, the Burden of Proof is strictly on Matt Walsh.... He can't simply say, "The Pats told me to video this and that and this and that, here are the tapes to prove it" , because the PATS will deny any knowledge of it, and say Mat Walsh filmed footage without any knowledge of the PATS organization...
Bring it on....Matt Walsh will be the fool on the hill! :rocker:
He probably needs indemnity because it's not legal for his to possess these tapes. They belong to the team. You can't just take them with you if you leave the job.
Someone please tell me how the league and our government can forgive someone for stealing to convict another of a crime? This is not like making a deal with the DA.
Makes me wonder if someone on the Rams would give Walsh one of their own tapes so Walsh can claim it came from the Patriots.
Who's to say that a more likely scenario isn't the fact that Walsh snuck into the practice, taped the practice, the Patriots refused to accept the tapes, fired Walsh - leading him to hold onto the tapes in hopes of blackmail or somehow using them to his advantage?
Wonder why he was fired.
Indemnification agreements are like any agreements - simply what I will do for you and what the you will do for me. Walsh could easily be covered for damages arising from theft of the videotape and for breach of a confidentiality agreement. This matter is purely civil unless he lies under oath, then it become a criminal matter. I cannot believe any law enforcement agency has interest in investigating a stolen tape (not to mention statutes of limitations on theft charges given the time of theft (2002/2003)).
If this clown is still saying the terms of the indemnification agreement are not right, it starts to sound a little fishy. No agreement will cover perjury on the stand, and I suspect slander/libel claims will similarly not be covered. In short, if you lie on the stand you deal with the damages. Testify honestly and violate a confidentiality agreement in doing so and the NFL picks up the bill. It is a simple issue, so the fact there is all this wrangling tends to make me believe Walsh has nothing to add.
At some level, I still believe mediots in contact with Walsh may have told him it makes for good theater to draw this saga out. Once Specter and Walsh go away, Spygate has no legs which means these mediots will have to actually write something creative rather than catering to Pats haters.
You don't collect when you're fired either, at least for wrongdoing.But he told his friends and family he quit yet collected unemployment. You don't collect unemployment when you quit a job.
Matt Walsh has always been a pathological liar and he knows the Patriots have plenty of dirt to destroy his image if this thing goes further.
That's why he's scared. Nothing more, nothing less.
The fact that he has tapes, in and of itself, doesn't prove anything.
Heck, we don't even know what's on these tapes. For all we know, Walsh might have just copied stuff that was on the six tapes the Patriots recycled.
Most importantly, though, I honestly believe that there's smoke here, but no fire--precisely because the Patriots issued a denial. Remember what Goodell said: there would be no further punishment unless he could establish that the Patriots had lied to him. If such a tape exists, and they truly were responsible for it, they would be in more trouble for denying it than by not saying anything at all--and they denied doing this back in September.
Why does Walsh have the tapes? If he made them for the Patriots then why does he have them? Legally the Patriots win this one ... however, Congress does have their ways.
True. Anyone telling themselves any different are just fooling themselves. In the court of public opinion, the most important court imo, they will believe Walsh. This isn't the end either, IF TRUE. There are others out there or with the Pats right now that will eventually tell more, IF TRUE. Imagine if this were another team, like the Jets, how would you be reacting?I disagree. If he has tapes and was a Patriots employee, the assumption will be he did it on behalf of the Patriots. I don't care what they say, no one will believe otherwise. He doesn't have to prove ****. Simply producing the tapes, people will believe the Patriots did it.
J D Sal
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