The court case would just be based on Br*dy's penalty and the arbitration, part of the argument will be if Vincent had the authority to handle the penalty phase and if Goodell should have heard the arbitration himself. It is possible he could get off on that technicality. What is not in question and would not be part of the federal case at all is the fact that Br*dy was complicit in the deflation of the balls. Br*dy was involved in the deflation and now with his destruction of his phone Br*dy just pushed the few people that were on the fence, about who to believe, over to the other side. These P*ts fans that think he is going get cleared of deflating balls do not have even the slightest clue. Penalty may get lessened but everyone will still know Br*dy was part of having the balls deflated. That is everyone except P*ts fans.
"Easy compadre, I'm your friend out here, alright? If you want to throw down, fine. I've got Jack Johnson and Tom O'Leary waiting for you right here." Not yet, he's working on the league.
Goodell is pissed that he didn't get to destroy any evidence this time, even took Krafty-poo's bff bracelet off.
See Below http://www.nbcnews.com/tech/mobile/how-long-do-wireless-carriers-keep-your-data-f120367 Have you wondered how long your wireless carrier keeps text messages, call logs and your phone's Web surfing records? There are some answers to that, from a Justice Department document prepared for law enforcement with those details. The information was obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union of North Carolina via a Freedom of Information Act request, and shared with Wired.com. "The document, entitled, 'Retention Periods of Major Cellular Providers,' was produced in 2010 ... to advise law enforcement agents seeking to obtain cell phone records and was uncovered by the ACLU's coordinated records request on cell phone location tracking by police," the ACLU said. Here's a snapshot for subscribers of the four major carriers' policies, each with differing lengths of time for how long they keep data: Verizon: Keeps records of calls and cell towers used for a year; text message details are retained for up to one year, actual text message content between 3 to 5 days; Internet session information for up to a year, and Web sites visited for up to 90 days. AT&T: Stores call records for between 5 to 7 years; cell tower records since July 2008; text message details for between 5 to 7 years; text message content is not retained; Internet session information and destinations for up to 72 hours. Sprint: Hangs onto call records and cell tower records for between 18 and 24 months. Internet session and destination info for up to 60 days; text message details for up to 18 months, depending on the device; text message content not retained; Internet session info and destination info for up to 60 days. T-Mobile: Retains call record details for 5 years; cell towers used, "officially, 4-6 months, really a year or more;" text message details 5 years; text message content, not kept; Internet session and destination info is not kept. You can check out the full chart prepared by the ACLU on its website. They must need a server farm the size of Mexico.
I don't get it, if they have the phone numbers and were willing to provide the corresponding phones what's the difference?
Wonder what an "internet session" is? And why they need to hang onto that information for a year. Makes you wonder if this data is being chopped up and sold and to who?