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Post by NormanClature on May 21, 2018 9:25:17 GMT
Didn't Brady destroy his cell phone the day before the cops wanted to see it?  No. He got a new phone (and disposed of the old one) after he was assured that the NFL didn’t need it in their investigation. This is confirmed by the fact that the investigation interviewed him shortly after he swapped phones (unbeknownst to them) and they never asked him for the phone. The only reason the NFL even knew about the old phone is because it was included in a document provided by Brady’s legal team. Only then did it become an object of paramount importance. In order to be a good Patriots fan, you need to be able to discern the facts from the fables. There’s a lot of misinformation being bandied about by butt-hurt fans of other loser teams. It’s a minor inconvenience, considering the upside to being a fan of the greatest team to ever play the game. Shall I pencil you in, or do you have some more questions? According to the Wells report, it was concluded that it was "more probable than not," the New England Patriots equipment personnel were deliberately circumventing the rules. Further more, Brady was implicated as it was concluded he was more probable than not that to be "generally aware" of the deflation. The report focuses on the communications and actions of locker-room attendant Jim McNally and equipment assistant John Jastremski. The report concludes it was "more probable than not" that the two deliberately released air from Patriots game balls after they were tested by game officials. In several texts between Jastremski and McNally, the two mention and joke about inflation, deflation, needles, and gifts from Tom Brady to McNally. Tom Brady was a constant reference point in these discussions. McNally referred to himself as "the deflator" in a text message to Jastremski as far back as May 2014.
The Wells Report relied on scientific analysis performed by Exponent and supported by Dr. Daniel Marlow, a professor of Physics at Princeton University. This analysis concluded that no studied factors accounted for the loss of air pressure exhibited by the Patriots game balls. The Wells Report asserted that the scientific study supported the report's conclusion that the loss of air pressure may be accounted for by human intervention.
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