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IN OCTOBER 2017, an ESPN reporter visited the University of Pittsburgh's Archives & Special Collections, housed in a five-story brick building in a neighborhood of warehouses and auto repair shops. For two days, the reporter sifted through Sen. Arlen Specter's letters, speeches, memos, notes and calendars, accumulated across a half-century career in public life, searching for evidence identifying the friend who had offered cash if the senator would shut down his pesky Spygate inquiry.
Two autumns earlier, the reporter had received a tip about the mutual friend's name. At the time, the man had just launched an outside and underdog campaign for president. But the tip was hard to confirm. Among Specter's papers, the reporter found a few clues but nothing conclusive. Before and after the visit to Pittsburgh, the reporter made more than a dozen calls to confidants of Specter, who died in October 2012 of complications from non-Hodgkin lymphoma, but had failed to turn up anything definitive. Another ESPN reporter visited Washington, D.C., meeting with Specter's former staffers at fashionable Beltway gossip venues BLT Steak and Off the Record. Nothing conclusive turned up.
But recently and unexpectedly, there's been movement in the quest. Follow-up conversations with the people closest to Arlen Specter -- his oldest son, Shanin, a Philadelphia personal injury and medical malpractice attorney, and Charles Robbins, Specter's trusted longtime communications aide and the ghostwriter of two Specter memoirs -- revealed this: The man who dangled campaign cash if Specter were to drop the Spygate inquiry was none other than Donald J. Trump.
Not only that: Trump had told Specter he was acting on behalf of Robert Kraft.
That evening, during a three-hour conversation inside the dark-hued den of Specter's Georgetown condo, the senator was in an expansive mood, discussing what he had considered his noble crusade for fairness in professional sports. For two decades, Specter was a frequent, loud critic of the NFL. It galled him that franchises extorted cities for new, mostly publicly financed stadiums. More than once, Specter had threatened to file legislation that would revoke the NFL's invaluable antitrust exemption. "This is part of Arlen Specter's thesis that the NFL owns America," Specter told Robbins that night, according to a transcript of their conversation. "They're addicted to pro football in a way they have never been addicted to baseball. Or heroin."
originally posted by: inosomthingudontno
LOL ESPN......................
Bill Belichick Hates Trump. So why would Trump help him?
Article 9.1 (C) (14) of the Constitution and Bylaws of the NFL No member shall: "Use at any time, from the start to the finish of any game in which a club is a participant, any communications or information-gathering equipment, other than Polaroid-type cameras or field telephones, including without limitation videotape machines, telephone tapping or bugging devices, or any other form of electronic devices that might aid a team during the playing of a game.”
Arlen Specter was an American lawyer, author and politician who served as a United States Senator from Pennsylvania from Text1981 to 2011. Specter was a Democrat from 1951 to 1965, then a Republican from 1965 until 2009, when he switched back to the Democratic Party. First elected in 1980, he is the longest-serving senator from Pennsylvania, having represented the state for 30 years.
Wikipedia
originally posted by: RazorV66
originally posted by: inosomthingudontno
LOL ESPN......................
Bill Belichick Hates Trump. So why would Trump help him?
Who says Belichick hates Trump?
Anyway I don’t think it even matters one way or the other because the NFL fined Belichick $500,000, the team $250,000 and a 1st round draft pick...they certainly didn’t get off easy.
Specter had a hard on for the NFL, he didn’t like football or something.
originally posted by: inosomthingudontno
originally posted by: RazorV66
originally posted by: inosomthingudontno
LOL ESPN......................
Bill Belichick Hates Trump. So why would Trump help him?
Who says Belichick hates Trump?
Anyway I don’t think it even matters one way or the other because the NFL fined Belichick $500,000, the team $250,000 and a 1st round draft pick...they certainly didn’t get off easy.
Specter had a hard on for the NFL, he didn’t like football or something.
Belichick...