• Follow us on Twitter @buckeyeplanet and @bp_recruiting, like us on Facebook! Enjoy a post or article, recommend it to others! BP is only as strong as its community, and we only promote by word of mouth, so share away!
  • Consider registering! Fewer and higher quality ads, no emails you don't want, access to all the forums, download game torrents, private messages, polls, Sportsbook, etc. Even if you just want to lurk, there are a lot of good reasons to register!

Jameis Winston (QB Browns)

This kid >
deliv01.jpg


would be embarrassed to be named Jimbo.
 
Upvote 0
Upvote 0
It may have cost him more than 7 mi now, given that the talking heads are claiming his draft status has dropped a couple dozen places. If he'd just been his usual jackass self without the rape allegations becoming public, I don't think that would have happened.

Seems like a pretty cheap price to me. How much would most people charge to have their sisters/daughters drugged, raped, filmed, and exposed to national scrutiny and scorn and accusation by their local community? Given that the strongest of women still have residue from a private rape, it's hard to imagine what the circumstances of this event have done to the young woman involved.

If Jam really wasn't guilty, it's a damn shame, because everything about the way this was handled by the university and the local PD just SCREAM cover-up. If it was their intention to protect the reputation of an innocent kid, they couldn't have gone about it in a worse way.
 
Upvote 0
This guy doesn't come cheap. I wonder how Winston is paying for his services. I'm willing to bet he isn't representing Winston "pro bono".

That was my question, too. Maybe he has a lien against future NFL earnings. (Good luck collecting on that if Jams continues on his present course. He may never see the inside of an NFL stadium without buying a ticket first.)

Oh, that I didn't have to pack to move next month. The photoshop possibilities are virtually infinite:

Mr. Cornwell also served as Vice President and General Counsel for the Upper Deck Company, Upper Deck International, and Upper Deck Authenticated. As the principal negotiator for Upper Deck’s trading card and memorabilia licenses with each of the professional sports leagues and their players associations, Mr. Cornwell negotiated and administered licenses and endorsement agreements that earned Upper Deck and its affiliates in excess of $300 million in annual gross revenues.

Somebody has to have time on their hands: Let's see those model trading cards.
 
Upvote 0
That was my question, too. Maybe he has a lien against future NFL earnings. (Good luck collecting on that if Jams continues on his present course. He may never see the inside of an NFL stadium without buying a ticket first.)

Re:In 1992, Mr. Cornwell was recruited by Leigh Steinberg and Jeff Moorad to join their sports agency, where he represented professional athletes such as Howie Long, Warren Moon, Desmond Howard, Junior Seau, Troy Aikman, Steve Young, Greg Anthony, and John Starks.

I wonder if he has some agreement (written or verbal) to be Winston's agent.
 
Upvote 0
tumblr_mehnylZOJ71qcv9vp.gif


Lawyer of alleged victim in Jameis Winston case says Winston's attorney tried to pay off accuser

From the article:

The statement continues:

“Patricia Carroll didn’t even know who David Cornwell was until he called. Mr. Cornwell then himself flew down from Atlanta to negotiate with Ms. Carroll. Settlement discussions were immediately unproductive as Cornwell was crude and insulting going so far as to say ‘your client likes to [expletive] football players.’ When told that the client’s main concern was not money but that Winston be held accountable for his actions, Cornwell threatened to sue our client and her parents for civil racketeering in an effort to intimidate them into staying quiet."

Clune goes onto to say that Cornwell misrepresented the timeline in which the accuser reported the incident.

“Mr. Cornwell additionally and inaccurately portrays that our client chose to file a complaint ‘two years later.’ The truth is that the University approached our client in October of 2013 and asked her for the first time whether she would cooperate with disciplinary charges against Mr. Winston after the school received a second report of sexual misconduct by another woman.”


 
Upvote 0
That was my question, too. Maybe he has a lien against future NFL earnings. (Good luck collecting on that if Jams continues on his present course. He may never see the inside of an NFL stadium without buying a ticket first.)

Oh, that I didn't have to pack to move next month. The photoshop possibilities are virtually infinite:



Somebody has to have time on their hands: Let's see those model trading cards.


This should help get the fun started

gamble.jpg
 
Upvote 0
The truth is that the University approached our client in October of 2013 and asked her for the first time whether she would cooperate with disciplinary charges against Mr. Winston after the school received a second report of sexual misconduct by another woman.

Is there info out there about this one?
 
Upvote 0
Back
Top