NFL: Release the Fucking Report
Even more women came forward with allegations of sexual harassment and assault against the Washington Football Team—sorry, Commanders—during a House hearing.
CongressPolitics

How many?
How many more women need to publicly relive the nightmare of being sexually harassed while employed by the Washington Football Team for the NFL to take them seriously? How many more women need to name their abusers into a microphone, detailing the chilling stories of how they were grabbed and groped and taunted by their own bosses in front of the United States House of Representatives? How many more women will suffer through old trauma before our nation’s darling little football league admits to its complicity in the institutionalized silencing of its employees?
No, seriously. I’m asking: How fucking many? Because Emily Applegate, Melanie Coburn, Tiffani Johnston, Megan Imbert, Rachel Engleson, Ana Nunez, Tiffany Bacon Scourby, Alicia Klein, Shannon Slate, and dozens of other anonymous former Washington Football Team employees who went through hell at work, under the watchful eye of the NFL, are somehow not enough.
On Wednesday, three more anonymous former Washington Football Team employees came forward with new allegations of sexual harassment on an episode of HBO’s Real Sports podcast, claiming players whipped their dicks out in the middle of the workplace and asked them to engage in sex, while another player told a woman she had “DSL” (dick sucking lips). One employee said she was admonished for not sleeping with a potential sponsor in order to close a deal. Alexis, another anonymous source, said, “I felt like a piece of meat.”
And on Thursday, six of the team’s former employees pled their case in front of Chairwoman Carolyn B. Maloney’s House Oversight Committee. Since the Washington Post first detailed allegations against the team in July of 2020, the mountain of individuals speaking out both against former executives and team owner Dan Snyder has continued to grow. But the NFL still won’t release its final report—initiated first by Snyder in 2020, then passed to the NFL for an independent investigation—nearly four months after its completion. The victims suspect that the report will detail the specific horrors of the Washington Football Team’s dangerous workplace culture that the NFL does not want getting out.
At Thursday’s House hearing, multiple survivors of the team’s repeated abuse and sexual harassment relived moments of physical violations and emotional manipulation in front of Congress. Tiffany Mattingly Johnston, a former cheerleader and marketing employee, came forward with new allegations, saying Snyder verbally abused employees in front of her. She also said Snyder had inappropriately touched her at a team dinner, placing a hand on her leg while she was seated next to him. After the dinner, Johnston said Snyder then pushed her towards his limo and offered to take her back to her car. She recalled a team attorney at the time walked up to him and said, sternly, “Dan. Very bad idea.”
Rep. Maloney also presented a letter from Jason Friedman, a former VP who worked for the Washington Football Team for over 20 years and who had previously not spoken out on this matter. Friedman said he was with Johnston the night of the dinner, and witnessed Snyder grab Johnston’s arm and attempt to pull her into his limousine.