Villanueva regrets how anthem decision played out
September 26, 2017 by admin
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Pittsburgh Steelers offensive tackle Alejandro Villanueva, a former U.S. Army Ranger who served in Afghanistan, explained to reporters Monday why he didn’t stay with his teammates during the national anthem prior to Sunday’s game against the Chicago Bears:
I would say that my personal thoughts about this situation is that regardless of this plan, very few players knew that I was going to the tunnel because I only talked to the team leadership and so because of that I didn’t give them an opportunity to stand with me during the national anthem. That is the very embarrassing part on my end in what transpires. Because when everybody sees an image of me standing by myself everybody thinks that the team and the Steelers are not behind me and that’s absolutely wrong. It’s quite the opposite, actually the entire team would have been out there with me even the ones that wanted to take a knee would have been out there with me had they known these extreme circumstances that at Soldier Field in the heat of the moment when I’ve got soldiers, wounded veterans texting me that I have to be out there. Then I think everything would have been put aside from every single one of my teammates no doubt. So because of that, I’ve made coach [Mike] Tomlin look bad and that is my fault and my fault only. I’ve made my teammates look bad and that is my fault and my fault only and I’ve made the Steelers also look bad and that is my fault and my fault only. So unwilling I’ve made a mistake and I’ve talked to my teammates about the situation. Hopefully they understand it. If they don’t I still have to live with it because the nature of this debate is causing a lot of very heated reactions from fans from players and it’s underserving to all the players and coaches from this organization.
Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger explained how Villaneuva got separated from his teammates in the tunnel leading to the field.
“There was a flag or something coming off the field so there was a bunch of Bears fans coming off the field holding that, going in front of us, so it kind of held us up. Al was down at the end of the tunnel where we had told him we were going to come at the end of the tunnel. We were going to go to the tunnel to stand together. By time all the chaos kind of happened in front of us, as we started to take our step the anthem started, so we stopped to show respect for the anthem. I was talking to Cam [Heyward]. I regret not going down to Al. But Al didn’t know we were not there. Al thought we were standing with him. There was no division there. We were 20 feet behind him … There was no division there. Just is the way it appeared through pictures and camera stuff.”
Steelers players decided during a team meeting Saturday they would not go onto the field during the anthem. Steelers coaches, including Tomlin, stood on the sideline during the anthem. Villanueva said he spoke to Roethlisberger on Saturday about leading the Steelers onto the field alongside the team captains and that the quarterback agreed to it.
Villanueva’s jersey has become the highest-selling jersey on Shop.NFL.com since Sunday.
Roethlisberger released a statement Monday, saying he wished the Steelers “approached it differently.”
I was unable to sleep last night and want to share my thoughts and feelings on our team’s decision to remain in the tunnel for the national anthem yesterday. The idea was to be unified as a team when so much attention is paid to things dividing our country, but I wish we approached it differently. We did not want to appear divided on the sideline with some standing and some kneeling or sitting.
As a team, it was not a protest of the flag or the anthem. I personally don’t believe the anthem is ever the time to make any type of protest. For me, and many others on my team and around the league, it is a tribute to those who commit to serve and protect our country, current and past, especially the ones that made the ultimate sacrifice.
I appreciate the unique diversity in my team and throughout the league and completely support the call for social change and the pursuit of true equality. Moving forward, I hope standing for the anthem shows solidarity as a nation, that we stand united in respect for the people on the front lines protecting our freedom and keeping us safe. God bless those men and women.
Tomlin is expected to speak with the media Tuesday at noon ET.
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Anthony Weiner Sentenced to Nearly Two Years in Prison for Sexting Scandal
September 26, 2017 by admin
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Anthony Weiner — the former New York congressman whose career and marriage were wrecked by sexting scandals — sobbed Monday as a federal judge sentenced him to nearly two years in prison for X-rated communication with a 15-year-old girl.
It was the denouement of a three-act drama that took Weiner, 53, from the hallowed halls of the U.S. Capitol to a wood-paneled courtroom in the city he once hoped to lead as mayor.
“I was a very sick man for a long time,” Weiner told the judge in asking for leniency. “I have a disease but I have no excuse.”
The disgraced Democrat’s voice began cracking moments after he started reading a statement in which he invoked his soon-to-be ex-wife, Huma Abedin, and their young son. Abedin, a former aide to Hillary Clinton, was not in the courtroom, but Weiner’s parents and brother sat in the first row.
Related: Why Anthony Weiner’s Sentence Could Have Been Worse
Pausing at times to wipe his eyes with a tissue, Weiner said that even after his predilections were publicly exposed twice before, forcing him to resign from Congress and dooming a mayoral run, he remained in denial.
“I convinced myself my behavior wasn’t really a problem,” Weiner, 53, said.
But now, he said, he realizes he is “an addict,” attends therapy twice a week and is trying to help others with sexual compulsions. “I ask you for the opportunity to prove that it’s real,” he told U.S. District Judge Denise Cote. “If I fail, I know what will happen, but with God’s grace I know I will not.”
Weiner regained his composure as he waited for the judge to hand down the sentence, but when she said he would have to serve 21 months, he began crying again.
His head bowed, he held his hands over his face as she spelled out the remaining terms of the sentence, including supervised release for three years, DNA collection and federal and state sex offender registration. Weiner is prohibited from having contact with the victim and must take part in a sex offender treatment program, Cote ruled. He was also ordered to pay a $10,000 fine, but no restitution.
He will remain free until Nov. 6. It has not been decided where he will do his time. His lawyer said that being sent to the federal jail in Manhattan, a maximum security facility, would make it difficult for Weiner to see his son and asked that he be sent to a lower-security facility. But the judge said the most she could do was not recommend the lockup closest to New York City.
The charge to which Weiner pleaded guilty, one count of transferring obscene material to a minor, carries a maximum of 10 years in prison.
Prosecutors asked for 21 to 27 months, telling the court that on three separate occasions Weiner went online from his Manhattan apartment “and asked a real 15-year-old girl to display her naked body for him and to sexually perform.”
“There is a history here that simply cannot be ignored,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Amanda Kramer said, referring the earlier scandals. “What required to stop the defendant from re-offending is a meaningful term of imprisonment.”
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Weiner’s lawyer, Arlo Devlin-Brown, pushed for probation, saying he would not get the treatment he needs in federal prison. He focused on what Weiner had not done: he didn’t initiate the contact with the teen, he didn’t try to meet her and he didn’t collect child pornography or display the hallmarks of pedophilia.
“This was his first teenage and his last teenage victim,” Devlin-Brown said.
Cote’s remarks suggested she was trying to strike a balance between the seriousness of the offense and Weiner’s efforts at rehabilitation.
She said she had received letters from the 15-year-old’s father and grandfather, but did not disclose their contents. The motives of the girl, who sold her story to a British newspaper, played no role in her decision, she said. Instead, the judge said, the opportunity to send a message that would deter others from preying on minors was a significant factor.
“This was a serious crime and it’s a serious crime that deserves a serious punishment,” Cote said. “She was a minor. She was a victim. She’s entitled to the law’s full protection.”
The sentencing capped a six-year scandal that revealed Weiner to be a savvy, ambitious politician by day and a reckless Internet lothario by night.
It began unfolding in 2011 when he accidentally tweeted a photo of his bulging crotch, prompting his resignation from Congress amid revelations the misfire wasn’t a one-time transgression.
Two years later, Weiner mounted a run for mayor of New York, but that campaign was derailed by revelations that he had continued to have steamy conversations online, using the alias Carlos Danger, after he quit the House to focus on being a “better husband” to a pregnant Abedin.
When the last round of allegations surfaced in 2016 — including reports that Weiner had transmitted a photo of himself shirtless and aroused, with his son asleep on the bed next to him, to a mother of two — Abedin announced she was leaving him. Their divorce is not yet final.
The probe became a factor in the presidential election when James Comey, the FBI director at the time, announced that an investigation into Clinton’s private server needed to be reopened because of emails found on a laptop used by Weiner and Abedin. Clinton has said the development contributed to her loss to Donald Trump.
In a letter before sentencing, Abedin asked the judge for leniency on behalf of the couple’s son, describing Weiner as a good father.
“With Anthony, I have repeatedly found myself in circumstances I never imagined,” she wrote. “I am devastated by Anthony’s actions, and I understand he must face their consequences.”
Following the sentencing, Weiner’s lawyers issued a statement saying they were “disappointed” that he would be imprisoned.
“Judge Cote reasoned that because of Anthony’s notoriety, a sentence of imprisonment could discourage others from following in his footsteps. We certainly hope this public service message is received, but it has resulted in a punishment more severe than it had to be given the unusual facts and circumstances of this case,” they said.