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12-MAY-2008: In this Aug. 16, 2007 file photo, NFL commissioner Roger
Goodell addresses the media after meeting with the Detroit Lions
organization at their football training facility in Allen Park, Mich.
Former Patriots video assistant Matt Walsh has sent the NFL eight
videotapes that show New England violated league rules by recording
opposing coaches' playcalling signals. The tapes were scheduled to
arrive at the league offices in New York on Thursday, May 8, 2008.
(AP Photo/Paul Sancya, File) [Photo copyright 2008 by AP]
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NEW YORK - Former Patriots video assistant Matt Walsh arrived at the NFL offices Tuesday morning to meet with commissioner Roger Goodell to discuss New England's videotaping of opposing coaches' playcalling signals in violation of league rules.LAST MINUTE TRAVEL DEALS Walsh declined to comment to reporters as he walked into the league offices followed by horde of cameramen and photographers. Walsh is scheduled to meet with Sen. Arlen Specter in Washington later in the day. Specter, the senior Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, has been critical of the NFL's handling of the investigation. Goodell and Specter each plan to hold a news conference after meeting with Walsh. Patriots coach Bill Belichick was fined $500,000, while the team was fined $250,000 and forced to forfeit its 2008 first-round draft choice. The Spygate investigation began after the NFL confiscated tapes from a New England employee who recorded the New York Jets' defensive signals from the sideline during the 2007 opener. Last week, Walsh sent the NFL eight videotapes that showed the Patriots recording playcalling signals. The tapes included signals by coaches of five opponents in six games from 2000-02. The league said the tapes were consistent with what it already knew. Walsh worked for New England from 1997 to 2003. His name surfaced just before this year's Super Bowl, nearly five months after the Patriots were sanctioned. After more than two months of negotiations, lawyers for the league and Walsh finally agreed April 23 to terms that would allow him to talk with Goodell. They include an agreement by the Patriots not to sue Walsh and to pay his legal expenses and his airfare to New York from Hawaii, where he is now a golf pro. Goodell has said that the Patriots could be subject to further sanctions if new information about previously unknown infractions arises. Specter, from Pennsylvania, met with Goodell in February after raising the possibility of congressional hearings if he wasn't satisfied with the commissioner's answers about the handling of the investigation. Earlier that month, the Boston Herald reported that an unidentified Patriots employee illegally taped the Rams' final walkthrough before the 2002 Super Bowl, when New England, a two-touchdown underdog, upset St. Louis 20-17. Walsh's lawyer, Michael Levy of McKee Nelson LLP, said Walsh has never claimed to have a tape of the walkthrough and was not the source for the report. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Related News Topics:
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