New judge assigned to players' antitrust lawsuit vs. league
NFL.com Wire Reports
Published: March 14, 2011 at 10:57 a.m.
Updated: March 14, 2011 at 02:59 p.m.
An April 6 hearing date has been set in the federal antitrust lawsuit filed by players against the NFL.
The players filed a request last week for an injunction that would keep the NFL and the teams from engaging in a lockout, which took effect at midnight Friday. The hearing is scheduled to be in front of U.S. District Judge Susan Richard Nelson in Minnesota.
The case first went to Judge Richard Kyle, who recused himself for unspecified reasons. It was reassigned to Judge Patrick Schiltz. On Monday, Schiltz cited a conflict of interest because he represented the NFL in several cases as a private practice attorney. The case then went to Nelson.
The case will not be reassigned, a players union source told NFL Network insider Jason La Canfora. The players wanted the case heard before Judge David Doty, who has overseen NFL labor matters since the early 1990s.
The case was filed in Doty's district for a reason but assigned randomly. Doty will still oversee the case of the network television revenue dispute between the players union and owners.
Earlier this month, Doty ruled that the NFL violated the collective bargaining agreement by making deals with television networks that involve continued payments during a lockout. Doty has ordered another hearing to determine whether the players will receive financial damages or an injunction preventing the league from collecting the money during a lockout.
Meanwhile, The National Labor Relations Board continues to investigate the NFL's claim that the NFLPA did not negotiate in good faith and "surface bargained" with intent of eventually decertifying, public affairs officer Nancy Cleeland told La Canfora.
The league is contending that the NLRB has the authority to force the union back to the bargaining table despite the NFLPA's decertification and call for an injunction.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
NFL.com Wire Reports
Published: March 14, 2011 at 10:57 a.m.
Updated: March 14, 2011 at 02:59 p.m.
An April 6 hearing date has been set in the federal antitrust lawsuit filed by players against the NFL.
The players filed a request last week for an injunction that would keep the NFL and the teams from engaging in a lockout, which took effect at midnight Friday. The hearing is scheduled to be in front of U.S. District Judge Susan Richard Nelson in Minnesota.
The case first went to Judge Richard Kyle, who recused himself for unspecified reasons. It was reassigned to Judge Patrick Schiltz. On Monday, Schiltz cited a conflict of interest because he represented the NFL in several cases as a private practice attorney. The case then went to Nelson.
The case will not be reassigned, a players union source told NFL Network insider Jason La Canfora. The players wanted the case heard before Judge David Doty, who has overseen NFL labor matters since the early 1990s.
The case was filed in Doty's district for a reason but assigned randomly. Doty will still oversee the case of the network television revenue dispute between the players union and owners.
Earlier this month, Doty ruled that the NFL violated the collective bargaining agreement by making deals with television networks that involve continued payments during a lockout. Doty has ordered another hearing to determine whether the players will receive financial damages or an injunction preventing the league from collecting the money during a lockout.
Meanwhile, The National Labor Relations Board continues to investigate the NFL's claim that the NFLPA did not negotiate in good faith and "surface bargained" with intent of eventually decertifying, public affairs officer Nancy Cleeland told La Canfora.
The league is contending that the NLRB has the authority to force the union back to the bargaining table despite the NFLPA's decertification and call for an injunction.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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