Show me all the video from before they got on the elevator and all of the ride not just 3 seconds.
Of all of the 83 players charged with domestic violence (DV) why is this is the only one where a grand jury was asked to review the case? Any lawyers want to chime in before I have to explain what the ham sandwich rule is? The DA did not have a case. Period. if he did he would have filed it himself.
The longest suspension in the NFL for DV until this week was 3 weeks why does Rice get treated differently after another video bought was by TMZ Sports??? Let me spell it out to you MONEY big MONEY.
The NFL is a non profit organization who does not want hundreds of organizations and all of their constituents boycotting the NFL. They do not want them causing political or commercial pressures to the sponsors and NFL and that is exactly what they were surely facing for the failure to act. The Ravens had had enough bad publicity and had even signed a 2 year partnership with an domestic violence agency to try to calm the waters.
Ravens Partner With Local Abuse Center Following Ray Rice Domestic Violence Incident
Published August 29, 2014
The Ravens on Thursday announced a three-year partnership with the House of Ruth Maryland, a shelter for battered women and children, and the deal includes a $600,000 donation "from the team, training for the players and staff and promotional work on behalf of the centers," accor...
When the new video came out they were forced by NCADV and several others groups including commercial sponsorships to cut ties with him at any expense. The NFL had the same pressures from corporate sponsors and advocacy groups The NFL, a non profit, had to address the issue again due to these other non profits having some very strong support for their cause in the justice system and all the state and federal legislatures and could cause the NFL irreparable harm.
Here is a list of the top 20 out of hundreds of organizations that could lobby the NFL's sponsors and lobby lawmakers to have them no longer be considered a non profit. NFL spends millions lobbying lawmakers each year Ever wonder why?
- American Bar Association Commission on Domestic and Sexual Violence: The Commission seeks to address domestic and sexual violence from a legal perspective. Its mission is to increase access to justice for survivors of DV, sexual assault, and stalking by engaging the interest and support of members of the legal profession.
- Asian & Pacific Islander Institute on Domestic Violence: The API Institute is a national resource center focused on gender-based violence (DV, sexual violence, and trafficking) in Asian and Pacific Islander communities. It addresses these issues by increasing awareness, strengthening community strategies for prevention and intervention, and promoting research and policy.
- Battered Women’s Justice Project: BWJP offers DV-related training, technical assistance, and consultation to members of the criminal and civil justice systems. The Project analyzes and advocates for effective policing, prosecuting, sentencing, and monitoring of perpetrators of domestic violence.
- Child Welfare League of America: CWLA is comprised of a coalition of hundreds of private and public agencies serving at-risk children and families. The League works to advances policies and strategies that promote safe, stable families and assist children, youth, and adults whose families don’t meet those criteria.
- Equality Now: Working with grassroots organizations and activists, Equality Now seeks to protect and promote the human rights of women and girls all over the world by documenting violence and discrimination against women and mobilizing efforts to stop these abuses.
- Futures Without Violence: FWV aims to advance the health, stability, education, and security of women, men, girls, and boys worldwide. To that end, the organization was a big player in developing the Violence Against Women Act (passed by Congress in 1994) and continues to work with policy makers and train professionals (doctors, nurses, athletic coaches, and judges) to improve responses to DV and educate people about the importance of healthy relationships.
- INCITE! Women of Color Against Violence: INCITE! describes itself as a “national activist organization of radical feminists of color advancing a movement to end violence against women of color and our communities.” Comprised of grassroots chapters across the U.S., the organization works with groups of women of color and their communities to develop political projects that address the violence women of color may experience both within their communities and individual lives.
- Institute of Domestic Violence in the African American Community: Run out of the University of Minnesota, the Institute has several clearly defined objectives: to further scholarship in the area of African American violence; to provide outreach and technical assistance to African American communities experiencing violence; to raise awareness about the impacts of violence in African American communities; to influence public policy; and to organize violence-related trainings on local and national scales.
- Jewish Women International: JWI seeks to empower women and girls through economic literacy, community trainings, and education about healthy relationships. The organization aims to end violence against women by advocating for policies focused on violence prevention and reproductive rights, developing philanthropic initiatives along similar lines, and inspiring “the next generation of leaders” by recognizing and celebrating women’s achievements.
- Manavi: Manavi, which means “primal woman” in Sanskrit, is a women’s rights organization committed to ending violence and exploitation committed against South Asian women living in the U.S. The organization provides direct service to survivors of violence, grassroots organization aimed at changing communities, and awareness programs on local and national levels.
- Mending the Sacred Hoop: Relying on grassroots efforts, MSH works to end violence against Native women and children. Their overarching mission is “restore the sovereignty and leadership of Native women”; they seek to do so through technical assistance projects and organizing Native women to advocate for the end of violence.
- National Center on Domestic and Sexual Violence: A national training organization, NCDSV works to influence national policy and provides customized training and consultation to professionals working in fields that might influence domestic violence.
- National Coalition Against Domestic Violence: NCADV works from the premise that violence against women and children results from the abuse of power on all scales, from intimate relationships to societal issues like sexism, racism, and homophobia. Therefore, NCADV advocates for major societal changes that will eliminate both personal and social violence for all people by building coalitions, supporting shelter programs, providing public education, and developing policies and legislation.
- National Domestic Violence Hotline: The Hotline provides 24-hour support and crisis intervention to victims and survivors of DV through safety planning, advocacy, resources, and a supportive ear.
- National Latino Alliance for the Elimination of Domestic Violence (ALIANZA): Allianza is a network of organizations addressing the needs of Latino/a families and communities by promoting understanding, dialogue, and solutions that aim to eliminate domestic violence in Latino communities.
- National Network to End Domestic Violence: NNEDV is an advocacy organization made up of state domestic violence coalitions and allied organizations and individuals. The organization works closely with its members to understand the needs of domestic violence victims and programs, and then voices those needs to national policymakers.
- No More: No More arose from the desire to unite the diverse array of groups working to end domestic violence and sexual assault. Hundreds of representatives from the violence and assault prevention field collaborated to develop a symbol that unites all people working to end these issues, with the end goal of ratcheting up public awareness. The blue vanishing point symbolizes "zero," representing the organization's desire to reach zero incidences of domestic violence and sexual assault.
- The Northwest Network: Founded by lesbian survivors of domestic, the NW Network works to end abuse in lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender communities and to support and empower all survivors through education and advocacy.
- Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network (RAINN): RAINN is the nation’s largest anti-sexual violence organization. The Network created and operates the National Sexual Assault Hotline (800.656.HOPE) and operates the Department of Defense’s Safe Helpline. The organization also runs programs to prevent sexual violence, assist survivors, and ensure that rapists are brought to justice.
- V-Day: Founded by author Eve Ensler and activists from New York City, V-Day is a global activist movement seeking to end violence against women and girls. The organization stages creative events— most famously, The Vagina Monologues and the documentary Until the Violence Stops — to increase awareness, raise funds, and support other anti-violence organizations.
Their have been many a man who has hit a woman, who, in turn, were charged with a municipal court misdemeanors and never spent a day in jail. Out of the 83 NFL players I doubt that any one did a day in jail and some did not receive suspensions.
The fact is that Rice is being treated unfairly by the NFL and the Ravens because they have so much to lose. There have been player threaten to kill their G/Fs, players put guns in peoples faces, even spit on women's faces and the NFL did very little because technology did not catch it on video and sell it to the media to be exploited, Thus provoking every DV organization in the country to come down on the Ravens and the NFL.
Please note this!! You don't see them or hear about them lobbying against the system that allowed Rice to go into intervention and have no record.. Why are they not wanting Anthony Kearns III, the Hunterdon County Prosecutor's head? He is solely responsible for failing to prosecute Rice. You think that maybe he had seen the full video I want to see. I am not condoning hitting a woman, I think he should have picked up the redheaded stepchild and carried her through the casino screaming her fool head off and let security deal with it. But part of me feels that part of the blame is hers and without seeing the video in it's entirety, we will never know. I feel that it would have been a major screw up for the police not to know that there was a camera on the elevator and so I assume that Kernes had seen it. If not he is a lame prosecutor!!
We will never know if Rice was really a good man, who followed up on his commitment to work in the community to stop DV. I would assume the Ravens actions and $600K donation was to do the same thing as a group effort. We will never know what kind of football player he may have been because he will always be known for something other than football. Jerry gets a blowjob from a hooker in a bathroom, Irsay gets bombed out of his mind on a combination of oxycodone and hydrocodone, and Rice loses his job and possibly his future in the NFL because he hit his GF who was hitting on him. SOMETHING SMELLS HERE.