Reuben Foster's domestic violence charges reportedly dropped

Gruden on Reuben Foster: No guarantee he ever plays

A day after the Redskins claimed Reuben Foster off waivers, coach Jay Gruden said there's no guarantee the former first-round draft pick ever sees the playing field for Washington.

Speaking to reporters Wednesday, Gruden stressed Foster isn't close to playing for the Redskins in the wake of his arrest on suspicion of domestic violence over the weekend.

"There's no guarantee he's ever going to play here," Gruden said. "He's got a lot of work to do -- personally, with the team, with the NFL, with himself -- before he even thinks about playing football again."

Gruden said it was a team decision to claim Foster, who was waived by the San Francisco 49ers on Monday following his arrest on suspicion of a misdemeanor domestic violence battery charge in Tampa, Florida, on Saturday night. The NFL placed Foster on the Reserve/Commissioner Exempt List on Tuesday -- a move that prevents the second-year linebacker from playing for the Redskins until the NFL's investigation into Foster's arrest is concluded.

The Redskins considered what the public reaction would be to claiming Foster before they pulled him off the waiver wire, Gruden said.






"A little bit. Yeah, I'm sure there was," Gruden said. "From [president] Bruce [Allen] and [owner] Dan [Snyder] and, obviously, [VP of Player Personnel] Doug [Williams]. But at the end of the day, we decided to make the move and we'll deal with the outcry, so to speak. But for the most part, this is a young athlete, a young person, who got himself into some trouble and we want to find out exactly what happened."

Gruden said his past experiences with Foster played a role in the team claiming him. Guden was impressed with Foster when he spoke with him before the 2017 NFL Draft.

"I spent a lot of time with [Alabama] coach [Nick] Saban and Reuben," Gruden said. "...They had a lot of players we spent a lot of time with, and [Foster] was one of them. And, at that time, he was one of my favorite players in the draft defensively, as a player, and one of my favorite interviews as a person.

"What's happened since then, I don't know really a lot about what's happened. I just have read a little bit about what's happened and it's not good. But we will get to the bottom of it by the end of the day. Like I said there's no guarantee he'll ever step foot on a football field here, but we would like to find out more about what happened."

Still, Foster's arrest on Saturday wasn't his first run-in with the law since being drafted 31st overall by the 49ers last year.

Foster was charged in January in Alabama with second-degree marijuana possession. That charge was eventually dismissed after he completed a first-time offender diversion course, but he was suspended the first two games of the season for violating the NFL's conduct and substance-abuse policies.

Foster faced more serious charges for an incident in California in February. He was initially charged in April with felonies for domestic violence, making criminal threats and weapons possession after being accused of beating up his ex-girlfriend. A judge ruled there was no probable cause on the first two charges after the ex-girlfriend recanted the allegations.

In Saturday's incident, the alleged victim told police that during a verbal altercation with Foster, he slapped her phone out of her hand, pushed her in the chest area and slapped her with an open hand on the right side of her face. Officers observed a one-inch scratch on her left collarbone, according to police.

When asked by a reporter why the Redskins decided to claim Foster off waivers rather than wait and see how his legal and potential disciplinary issues play out, Gruden responded: "That's a good question, we [probably] could have done that. But we claimed him and we chose for him to be part of our organization."

Gruden also wouldn't say whether he believes, at this point, Foster deserves a second chance.

"I think a lot depends on it," he said. "And we don't know if he's going to get a second chance, quite frankly. We don't know. There has to be a lot of recovery, he's got to go through the process with the league, with the police. Individually he's going to have to get some help, in counseling.

"We understand that it's going to be a long process for him. But he's a young player. He made a mistake or two and at the end of the day we decided to take a chance and deal with it."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.
 
He should be 100% focused on getting his shit together before thinking of putting on the pads again. He needs to take some time away from the game entirely and reevaluate things. Regarding his former teammates helping keep him in line, any man that needs babysitters isn't a man I want on my team. I hate to see people waste their talent with bad decisions.

As for the woman, I don't want to allude to her being there for the money but if that's the case ask Steve Jobs, wealth don't buy health (-Push). Both of them should realize they don't need to be together at this point in their lives. They both need a long stint in therapy and/or Jesus.

Damn shame.
 
Everyone is flipping out about this waiver. Its crazy. I agree with Gruden. There is no guarantee he will play anywhere. But if NFL clears him, or turns out she is lying again, or it isn't as bad as everyone says, and or he can get his act together.....why not have the rights to him. If he doesn't, no harm no foul. I thinks it a smart move from the Skins. Why come to the party late?
 
Everyone is flipping out about this waiver. Its crazy. I agree with Gruden. There is no guarantee he will play anywhere. But if NFL clears him, or turns out she is lying again, or it isn't as bad as everyone says, and or he can get his act together.....why not have the rights to him. If he doesn't, no harm no foul. I thinks it a smart move from the Skins. Why come to the party late?
Ed Zackery...........Reuben is a free shot for the Washington............Free
 
Some house cleaning in the Redskins front office possibly related.

Redskins’ ‘do the right thing’ era was doomed from the start

ANALYSIS/OPINION:

I wrote the following in my Nov. 30 Washington Times column:

“The Lafemina-Redskins goodwill era came to an end Tuesday afternoon with the news that the organization he was brought in, along with a team of other suits, to save had yet again committed a self-destructive crime by picking up Reuben Foster, the former first-round pick who had been cut by the San Francisco 49ers after spending Saturday night in jail in Tampa, Florida, following his third arrest in 12 months.

“It’s over. Lafemina, the former NFL executive, won’t be here come 500 days, let alone 1,000.”


I guess I should have bet the under.

The Christmas purge of Redskins chief operating officer Brian Lafemina and his band of suits — chief marketing officer Steve Ziff, senior vice president of sales and marketing Jake Bye and chief commercial officer Todd Kline — took far less time than I predicted a month ago.

But make no mistake, it was the Foster acquisition that was the tipping point that sped up the exit of the group of imported executives brought in last summer to save this franchise from a dwindling and angry fan base that isn’t coming to watch them at Ghost Town Field and isn’t watching them on television.

Lafemina went to owner Dan Snyder and team president Bruce Allen with direct feedback from corporate ticketholders upset with Foster signing, according to sources. They lost that battle — and the war.

You can’t bring in a small army of executives — led by Lafemina, a former high-ranking and respected NFL league executive — to change the image and perception of this troubled franchise and then bring an accused woman beater to an organization that, among other things, was ground zero for the NFL’s cheerleader sexploitation scandal.

Foster’s guilt or innocence made no difference. It was a decision that insulted and ignored the attempts by Lafeminaand company to try to “do the right thing” every day for 1,000 days, as he put it.

It was the signal that Bruce Allen — the Prince of Darkness — not Lafemina, had Snyder’s ear.

Snyder, actually, had tired of the new business sermon at Redskins Park preached by Lafemina — this notion of truth and transparency.

That’s not the way either Snyder or Allen have ever done business, and the idea either could change was doomed from the start — from the moment Lafemina met with reporters in a conference room at Redskins Park last summer and talked about the team coming clean about the fraudulent season-ticket waiting list and the position that the team was a “sleeping giant.”

I was in the room at the time, and I thought at any moment, Allen would push a button and the whole floor would collapse and everyone disappear forever.

He did just that, eventually.

He just waited until several days before Christmas. Happy holidays.

Type the words “Redskins” and “embarrassment” into Google, and nearly 300,000 results come up. Shame is nearly a synonym for Redskins.

Lafemina and his business cronies were brought in to change that. To do so would have required years of work, probably more than the 1,000 days that Lafemina had latched on to as a slogan, and even then, it would have required a miracle — like Snyder undergoing some sort of dramatic personality change.

Lafemina is a smart guy, and he had to see the landscape coming in, as did the others — which makes me wonder what role, if any, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, who was Lafemina’s former boss, had in the arrival of the new business warriors at Redskins Park?

In other words, whose idea was it to bring in Lafemina, Ziff, Bye and Kline — the most dramatic change at Redskins Park since Snyder bought the team.

Yes, there was the hiring of coaches like Joe Gibbs and Marty Schottenheimer and other personnel moves that were important and dramatic.

But to make such a drastic change on the business side goes right to the heart of what Snyder was supposedly bringing to the table all these years. Sure, he’s not a football guy, we were told. But he is a smart, successful businessman.

Hiring Lafemina and company essentially called all that into question.

Bringing in Lafemina’s A-Team said something else. It said maybe Snyder has buried this franchise up to axle and needs help digging it out.

Who made that decision?

Did Snyder really look at himself in the mirror one morning and say, “I need help?”

Or did Goodell and the league gently, or not so gently, recommend that Snyder bring Lafemina and his colleagues on board because the NFL was concerned about how low one of their once-premiere franchises had sunk?

If that is the case, did Lafemina think he would be protected by the league?

It’s happened before. The late NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle recommended to New York Giants owners that they hire George Young, the former Miami Dolphins player personnel director who was working for Rozelle at the time, as their general manager when a family feud has turned the Giants into a laughingstock in the business.

The Giants went on to win two Super Bowls under Young’s direction.

If that happened, what, if any, repercussions will there be from the league for the Lafemina purge?

I think Snyder and Allen told everyone that they don’t care. They don’t care what the league thinks, they don’t care what the fans think, they don’t care what the sponsors think — they just don’t care. Those people don’t exist in the world of Snyder and Allen — a small, dark universe that is destroying itself like a cosmic black hole.

Hear Thom Loverro on 106.7 The Fan Wednesday afternoons and Saturday mornings and on the Kevin Sheehan Show podcast every Tuesday and Thursday.
 
The redskins are going to have a boatload of defensive Bama players. I saw Hamilton getting serious playing time at the end of the season. And Cam Sims looked great before his injury. With the addition of Pro bowler Clinton-Dix, this is getting weird, even by Redskins' standards.
 
So on any given play on defense six former Bama players could be on the field at the same time Payne, Allen, Hamilton, Anderson, Clinton-Dix and Foster. That's incredible I would be willing to bet that has never happened in the NFL.
 
The state of Maryland loves our boys. Baltimore and Washington are both littered with our boys.

One the main point of this thread, I sure hope Foster gets his act together. I mean goodness, lightning can strike once, and it has struck twice for him to get this lucky with two cases being dropped. I would not play with fire if I were him. Do it for your kids man, get your act together so you can provide for them and not raise them in a poor household like you were raised in.
 
Charges dropped, but he will still face punishment by the NFL.

For what, though? Evidently the charges were dropped because police/prosecutors didn't believe her story (apparently it changed several times). Are they going to suspend him for having bad taste in women?

Hilarious thing is this moron of a woman went on national TV and claimed she committed perjury. She said that she lied in court to "protect him" (while not explaining why her story changed three or four different times before admitting she lied about the incident), which is hilarious because lying to the police is also a crime and she admitted to that on the stand. So, either she lied to the police or she lied to the court. Either way, I have no clue how she hasn't been charged with anything.

Reuben at the very least is guilty of terrible judgment, though. Why you would bring this woman back around you after all that is beyond me. But I would imagine time served would be plenty for him. He missed more than half of the season in 2018 for a charge that was ultimately dropped.
 
Well! This is interesting. I still think Redskins need to do the right thing (they won't...) and mandate some kind of long-term counseling; i.e., make sure Foster has his together before he ever steps on the (practice) field.
 
Maybe, unlike McClain, he can learn from this and stay away from trouble.

Ro seemed to get his head on straight after moving back to Tuscaloosa and living with Javier Arenas for awhile and ended up becoming a Pro Bowler in Dallas before he got hooked on freaking codeine and ruined his career. Still think if he ever comes back to be a coach, Tuscaloosa would probably do wonders for him.
 
Charges dropped, but he will still face punishment by the NFL.

For what, though? Evidently the charges were dropped because police/prosecutors didn't believe her story (apparently it changed several times). Are they going to suspend him for having bad taste in women?

Hilarious thing is this moron of a woman went on national TV and claimed she committed perjury. She said that she lied in court to "protect him" (while not explaining why her story changed three or four different times before admitting she lied about the incident), which is hilarious because lying to the police is also a crime and she admitted to that on the stand. So, either she lied to the police or she lied to the court. Either way, I have no clue how she hasn't been charged with anything.

Reuben at the very least is guilty of terrible judgment, though. Why you would bring this woman back around you after all that is beyond me. But I would imagine time served would be plenty for him. He missed more than half of the season in 2018 for a charge that was ultimately dropped.

Violation of the personal conduct policy. The NFL doesn't need a crime to be committed to punish a player.
 
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