Washington Football Team, Jon Gruden email investigation now has U.S. Congress involved

LANDOVER, MD - OCTOBER 25: A general view of the Washington Football Team logo on the stadium before the game between the Washington Football Team and the Dallas Cowboys at FedExField on October 25, 2020 in Landover, Maryland. (Photo by Scott Taetsch/Getty Images)
LANDOVER, MD - OCTOBER 25: A general view of the Washington Football Team logo on the stadium before the game between the Washington Football Team and the Dallas Cowboys at FedExField on October 25, 2020 in Landover, Maryland. (Photo by Scott Taetsch/Getty Images) /
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As if the Washington Football Team, Jon Gruden email scandal and the NFL’s investigation weren’t messy enough, now U.S. Congress is getting involved. 

The NFL’s investigation into Washington Football Team emails regarding workplace discrimination under the watch of Bruce Allen and Dan Snyder has been messy. The bigoted language used in emails by now-former Raiders head coach Jon Gruden led to his resignation. However, the NFL found that “no other current team, personnel” was “implicated” in the emails.

While many fans were dubious of that in the immediate aftermath, the investigation has now drawn the attention of U.S. Congress.

CBS Sports’ Cody Benjamin was first to report that the U.S. House of Representatives Oversight Committee has sent a letter to NFL commissioner Roger Goodell requesting all information regarding the league’s investigation into Washington and Bruce Allen’s emails:

NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero obtained the full letter sent by Representatives Carolyn B. Maloney and Raja Krishnamoorthi to Goodell to further look into the “hostile workplace culture” in Washington.

The letter requested all documents, findings and information be handed over by Nov. 4.

The House Oversight Committee has requested all information regarding the NFL’s investigation on the Washington Football Team emails.

As noted by Josh Dubrow of the Associated Press, the impetus for the House getting involved is concerns over the NFL’s impartiality with their internal investigations:

Now, it should be noted that Gruden is not related directly to what is concerned here. Having said that, the fact that the scandal resulting from these emails led to his resignation still ties him closely to this.

There has been no immediate response from the league as to if they’ll comply with the request of the House Oversight Committee.

Having said that, this is a story that is most definitely not going away. And with the explosive nature of the Gruden comments and eventual resignation, one has to wonder if Congress getting involved will only lead to more revelations that rock the NFL.

Next. Jon Gruden on Raiders resignation: ‘The truth will come out’. dark