Tom Brady's agent calls Wells Report flawed, suggests NFL perpetrated sting operation

by
Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports / Reuters

The agent for New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady issued a scathing statement Thursday in the wake of NFL investigator Ted Wells' report that Brady likely was aware of and participated in a deliberate attempt to circumvent NFL rules and deflate footballs in the AFC Championship game.

Don Yee, who has represented Brady for his entire career, questioned Wells' integrity and suggested investigators determined Brady's guilt before seeking facts and then built the report around that framework. 

Yee also decried the fact that the Indianapolis Colts contacted the league to request special scrutiny for the Patriots' footballs during the game and the league neglected to inform the Patriots, essentially setting up what has been described as a sting operation. 

The full text of the statement is below:

The Wells report, with all due respect, is a significant and terrible disappointment. It’s omission of key facts and lines of inquiry suggest the investigators reached a conclusion first, and then determined so-called facts later. One item alone taints this entire report. What does it say about the league office’s protocols and ethics when it allows one team to tip it off to an issue prior to a championship game, and no league officials or game officials notified the Patriots of the same issue prior to the game? This suggests it may be more probable than not that the league cooperated with the Colts in perpetrating a sting operation. The Wells report buries this issue in a footnote on page 46 without any further elaboration. The league is a significant client of the investigators' law firm; it appears to be a rich source of billings and media exposure based on content in the law firm's website. This was not an independent investigation and the contents of the report bear that out – all one has to do is read closely and critically, as opposed to simply reading headlines. The investigators' assumptions and inferences are easily debunked or subject to multiple interpretations. Much of the report’s vulnerabilities are buried in the footnotes, which is a common legal writing tactic. It is a sad day for the league as it has abdicated the resolution of football-specific issues to people who don’t understand the context or culture of the sport. I was physically present for my client’s interview. I have verbatim notes of the interview. Tom made himself available for nearly an entire day and patiently answered every question. It was clear to me the investigators had limited understanding of professional football. For reasons unknown, the Wells report omitted nearly all of Tom’s testimony, most of which was critical because it would have provided this report with the context that it lacks. Mr. Wells promised back in January to share the results of this investigation publicly, so why not follow through and make public all of the information gathered and let the public draw its own conclusions? This report contains significant and tragic flaws, and it is common knowledge in the legal industry that reports like this generally are written for the benefit of the purchaser.

The Digest

Everything you need to know about the Wells Report

by theScore Staff

On May 6, Ted Wells released the findings from his investigation of the New England Patriots' alleged underinflating of footballs in their AFC Championship win over the Indianapolis Colts. Wells determined that it was "more probable than not" that Patriots personnel both participated in violations of league rules and were involved in a deliberate attempt to circumvent those rules.

Need to Know

  • As a result of the report, the NFL suspended Brady for the first four games of the 2015 season and fined the Patriots $1 million. New England will also have to forfeit its first-round pick in the 2016 draft as well as a fourth-round pick in the 2017 draft.

Related: Everything you need to know about Brady's suspension

  • Ted Wells, author of the Wells Report, defended his findings following the backlash after the Patriots' punishment was revealed. Wells shot back at detractors, saying "I think it’s wrong to question my independence because you don’t like my findings."
  • Once the report was released, newspapers were quick to poke fun at the findings, depicting everything from Brady as Pinocchio to Brady being physically deflated on their front pages.
  • Brady's agent Don Yee issued a scathing statement of the report questioning Wells' integrity and suggested investigators determined Brady's guilt before seeking facts and then built the report around that framework.
  • Even president Barack Obama took a jab at the Super Bowl champions when they visited the White House. "I usually tell a lot of jokes at these things, but with the Pats in town, I was afraid that 11 out of 12 of them would fall flat," Obama said.

Further Reading/Viewing

  • Juliet Macur of The New York Times believes the incident will forever tarnish Brady's legacy as one of the game's best players. [The New York Times]
  • Ian Crouch of The New Yorker examines the hit Brady's image will take not only from the revelation he likely cheated but the lies he likely told in the wake of his violations. [The New Yorker]
  • Ian O'Connor of ESPN.com dives deeper into what this mess means for Brady's credibility moving forward. [ESPN]
  • Dan Shaughnessy of The Boston Globe encourages the Patriots to come clean and start rebuilding trust, lest they tarnish their legacy irreparably. [The Boston Globe]
  • Peter King of The MMQB says if NFL commissioner Roger Goodell decides to penalize Brady with a suspension or heavy fine, it will forever alter Brady's perception among peers and fans. [MMQB]

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