It sounds like that’s going to be what the case hinges on. I just double checked the statute and it specifies “property of another”. If he owned the property and wasn’t trying to defraud the insurance company, the charge isn’t applicable.
That does NOT mean the NFL will care about that distinction. Their policy is not predicated on whether the player is guilty of a crime.
It sounds like that’s going to be what the case hinges on. I just double checked the statute and it specifies “property of another”. If he owned the property and wasn’t trying to defraud the insurance company, the charge isn’t applicable.
That does NOT mean the NFL will care about that distinction. Their policy is not predicated on whether the player is guilty of a crime.