Irvin files $100 million countersuit
After being accused of rape in a civil suit filed Thursday, former
Dallas Cowboys star Michael Irvin has responded with a
multi-million dollar countersuit.
The suit filed Friday in Dallas County, Texas, asks for $100
million due to what it claims are false allegations in a lawsuit
that the Hall of Fame wide receiver raped a woman in Hollywood,
Fla., in 2007.
The woman's claim, made just a few days before the Super
Bowl, was labeled a false attempt at "civil extortion" Friday by
Irvin's attorney. The woman's suit seeks unspecified damages for
the assault that allegedly took place at the Seminole Hard Rock
Hotel & Casino in Hollywood. The incident was reported to
Seminole tribal police on July 20, 2007, but the woman later signed
a waiver of prosecution, Seminole tribe spokesman Gary Bitner said.
"I think she just wanted to put this behind her," Bitner
said. The case was referred to state prosecutors.
Ron Ishoy, a spokesman for the Broward State Attorney's
office, said the matter remains under investigation but no charges
have been filed. Because the woman waited more than two weeks to
report the incident, there was no physical evidence or hotel
surveillance video, Bitner said.
Irvin, 43, starred at wide receiver for the Cowboys from 1988
to 1999. The Fort Lauderdale native was also a star in college for
the University of Miami, playing on the Hurricanes' 1987 national
championship team.
Irvin is now an analyst for the NFL Network and will be on
the air this weekend as part of Super Bowl coverage, NFL Network
spokesman Dennis Johnson said in an e-mail. He said the NFL
security department is looking into the allegations.
Until Friday, Irvin also hosted a radio show in the
Dallas-Fort Worth market on ESPN. That contract was terminated
Friday, although the network said the decision was made before the
lawsuit surfaced.
"His contract was up and the show has not performed," ESPN
said in a statement on its Web site. "We had previously decided to
cancel the show and decided this morning to make it effective
today."
Irvin's attorney, Larry Friedman of Dallas, said he was
approached by the woman's lawyer shortly before Irvin was to appear
on last season's "Dancing With The Stars" competition.
The offer, according to Friedman: Irvin must pay the woman $1
million or a lawsuit would be filed to coincide with the Super
Bowl, which is being played Sunday in Miami.
"I call it civil extortion: pay us or we'll ruin your life,"
Friedman said. "Nothing happened. There was no encounter between
this Jane Doe and Michael Irvin. The entire story is false, it's
bogus, it's made up."
The woman's Florida attorney did not immediately respond
Friday to a phone call and e-mail seeking comment.
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, speaking at a Super Bowl news
conference Friday, said he was not initially aware of the assault
allegation.
"We'll obviously take it seriously, make sure we understand
the facts and then take the appropriate steps," Goodell said.
According to the lawsuit, the woman claims Irvin got her
drunk and took her to his hotel room where he and another,
unidentified man insisted on sexual favors. The woman claims Irvin
raped her and the other man forced her to perform oral sex.
Irvin has had previous brushes with the law, including a
no-contest plea to a cocaine possession charge in 1996. Later that
year, Irvin and another Cowboys player were accused of sexual
assault by a woman, but an investigation found the story was false
and the woman recanted.