EDITOR’S NOTE: Thurs. May 9, 2012 10:40 pm PST
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Uploaded complete 896-page study to Scribd ; go to bottom of this post to read.
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How many of you even remember that way back in 1991, the Dept. of Health & Human Services sent out questionnaires to a large group of us retired NFL football players who played professionally since 1959? The study was to verify or counter a popular belief at the time that retired football players had shorter life spans. Like myself, many of you have also confirmed that you were told years ago to take your pensions early as you would not survive past the age of 55. It meant that your pension checks were discounted for taking early retirement but – based on a false interpretation of a so-called law by management that included those at the highest levels – it also disqualified those who took their pensions from receiving disability benefits as well. You can read about how Gene Upshaw had his words handed back to him in this early article from Michael Leahy in the Washington Post (Feb. 2008): Click HERE to read that article with attorney Lanny Davis’ answer. You can also read about how even Johnny Unitas was cheated out of his earned – and badly-needed – disability benefits by his own Union: Click HERE to read that post.
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Here’s a copy of the original letter from HHS in 1991. (We uploaded a copy of the original letter as well as the recent correspondence to Scribd for viewing and to make it downloadable. You can also click the Fullscreen button to enlarge it for easier navigation – just hit the EXIT FULLSCREEN button key to close):
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1991 Dept HHS Letter RE: NFL Football Players
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Dept of HHS NFL Study
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What’s not covered in this study that took over 20 years to complete? Concussions, brain injuries and long-term effects. While some of us may be happy to now hear that we’re going to be living longer, for too many of our families already seeing the memory loss and symptoms of dementia in many of you, this means that you may end up in need of longer assisted care than the average male. Small pensions, little or no access to disability benefits and the prospect of expensive long-term care for those with declining mental capacity. Sounds like one more heads-we-win-tails-you-lose proposition from the NFLPA and the NFL. Again.
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May 9, 2012 • Here’s the entire 896-page study from the NIOHS:
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Complete NIOHS NFL Study
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Posted by
Dave Pear |
Categories:
Bert Bell/Pete Rozelle NFL Players Retirement Plan,
brain,
CBA,
Concussions,
Dave Pear,
dementia,
ERISA,
football,
history,
Independent Football Veterans,
Legacy Fund,
NFL,
NFLPA,
Pension,
RobertinSeattle | Tagged:
American Journal of Cardiology,
and the Cardiovascular Mortality of Retired Professional Football Players”,
Christine M. Gersic,
Dept of Health & Human Services,
Everett Lehman,
HHS,
Johnny Unitas,
Lanny Davis,
Michael Leahy,
Misty J. Hein,
National Institute of Occupational Health and Safety,
NIOHS,
Playing Position,
Race,
Scribd,
Sherry L Baron,
Washington Post,
“Body Mass Index |
Posted with the express consent of Evan Weiner:

THE BUSINESS AND POLITICS OF SPORTS
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Wednesday, 2 May 2011
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BY EVAN WEINER
NEWJERSEYNEWSROOM.COM
COMMENTARY
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I didn’t know Junior Seau although I met him on the day he was drafted into the National Football League in 1990 and probably interviewed him after a football game a few times more. From all accounts, he was a fearsome presence on the football field; a killer who at times could control a game defensively.
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But Junior Seau didn’t live to be a ripe old age and until an autopsy is performed and a police investigation is complete, there is no need to speculate about the circumstances surrounding Seau’s death other than he was found dead of a shotgun wound on the morning of May 2, 2012 about 22 years after the San Diego Chargers football team called his name at the annual National Football League event.
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The gun wound should strike a nerve among former players. It seems that is becoming a way of life and death among NFL alum suffering from life altering injuries that probably came from years and years of absorbing hits on the football field. People do hear about former NFL players but there seems to be no tracking of high school and college players who years after their football careers ended killed themselves.
. continue reading »
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Posted by
Evan Weiner |
Categories:
Bert Bell/Pete Rozelle NFL Players Retirement Plan,
brain,
CBA,
Concussions,
Dave Pear,
dementia,
disability,
Evan Weiner,
football,
GLA,
Guest Commentary,
history,
Independent Football Veterans,
News,
NFL,
NFLPA,
Pension,
RobertinSeattle,
Social Security Disability,
sports gambling,
TBI,
Videos,
YouTube | Tagged:
Arena Football League,
Atlanta Falcons,
Bert Bell/Pete Rozelle NFL Players Retirement Plan,
Bob Costas,
brain injuries,
Bryant Gumbel,
CBA,
CBS,
Chicago Bears,
collective bargaining agreement,
Comcast's NBC Universal,
Concussions,
Dave Duerson,
Dave Pear,
David Stern,
Disney,
Do No Evil,
Ed Garvey,
ESPN,
Evan Weiner,
football,
Gene Upshaw,
HB,
HBO,
HBO Real Sports,
Junior Seau,
Madison Square Garden,
Mike Lupica,
NBA,
New Orleans Hornets,
New Orleans Saints,
News Corp.,
NFL,
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell,
NFLPA,
Non-Degenerative NFL Disability,
Post Concussion Syndrome,
Ray Easterling,
Rupert Murdoch,
Sam Huff,
San Diego Chargers,
Social Security Disability Insurance,
SSDI,
SuperDome,
Time Warner,
Tom Benson,
Tom Boswell,
Violent World of Sam Huff,
Washington Post,
YouTube |

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Over the past four and a half decades I have witnessed many, many, many, many acts of injustice, chicanery and dishonesty. Some of these acts occurred on the fields and arenas in sport (as a player, teammate and coach), some in the halls of justice, some in the media and press and others in the avenues of everyday life. But never in all my years of experience and knowledge as an athlete, coach, prosecutor, judge, attorney, teacher, professor, journalist, author and rights advocate, have I ever witnessed such open acts of deliberate manipulations of the truth, excessive greed, conscious indifference, breach of trust, conflicts of interest and cowardice as I have in observing the conduct of Gene Upshaw and DeMaurice Smith and their cronies.
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Posted by
Spencer Kopf |
Categories:
CBA,
Dave Pear,
disability,
football,
NFL,
NFLPA,
Pension,
RobertinSeattle,
Spencer Kopf | Tagged:
CBA,
collective bargaining agreement,
Dallas Morning News,
Dave Pear,
disability,
Disability Benefits,
Do No Evil,
football,
Garvey Garbling Player Issues,
Gene Upshaw,
Herb Adderley,
Jeffrey Kessler,
John Hogan,
Mike Francesa,
NFL,
NFLPA,
NFLPA Executive Director DeMaurice Smith,
Players Inc.,
Players Inc. Trial,
Richard Berthelsen,
RobertinSeattle,
Spencer Kopf,
The FAN,
Tom Condon,
Tom Jackman,
Washington Post |
Posted with the express consent of Evan Weiner:

THE BUSINESS AND POLITICS OF SPORTS
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24 March 2011
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BY EVAN WEINER
NEWJERSEYNEWSROOM.COM
COMMENTARY
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Washington Post sports columnist Sally Jenkins asked a question in a column written after the NFL lockout started on March 11. It was a simple query that the writer could not answer. “Where is it written that (NFL) owners are entitled to the lion’s share of revenues from structures we help build and support?”
. continue reading »
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Posted by
Evan Weiner |
Categories:
Dave Pear,
Evan Weiner,
football,
Independent Football Veterans Conference,
News,
NFL,
NFLPA | Tagged:
1986 Tax Reform Act,
Art Modell,
Arthur Blank,
Atlanta Falcons,
Bert Bell/Pete Rozelle NFL Players Retirement Plan,
Bill Bidwill,
brain,
brain injuries,
Canadian Football League,
CBA,
Cincinnati Bengals,
collective bargaining agreement,
Concussions,
Dave Pear,
disability,
Disability Benefits,
Do No Evil,
Evan Weiner,
football,
free agency,
Gene Upshaw,
Georgia Dome,
Georgia Frontiere,
Hurricane Katrina,
Independent Football Veterans Conference,
John Rowland,
Kingdome,
Lambeau Field,
Major League Baseball,
Medicare,
MLB,
National Hockey League,
National Labor Relations Board,
News,
NFL,
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell,
NFLPA,
NHL,
pension,
RobertinSeattle,
Ronald Reagan,
Soldier Field,
Washington Post,
William Clay Ford |
Wow! You’d think that it was the NFL that’s suffering from one too many concussions with as many hits as they’ve been taking on the issue of concussions lately. This past week, another series of news stories have been hitting the wires, covering everything from brain injuries in general to football concussions in particular. This recent run started off with Evan Weiner‘s piece from the New Jersey Newsroom on how football players are discarded in retirement (click HERE to read that earlier post) as well as Alan Schwarz‘s continuing series on the NFL’s history of dodgy mishandling of concussions over the years (click HERE for the last round of recent coverage).
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continue reading »
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Posted by
RobertinSeattle |
Categories:
News | Tagged:
Alan Schwarz,
brain injuries,
Bryant Gumbel,
Concussions,
Dan Rather,
Dave Pear,
Do No Evil,
Evan Weiner,
football,
HBO,
HBO Real Sports,
HDNet,
Huffington Post,
Michael Wilbon,
New Jersey Newsroom,
NFL,
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell,
NFLPA,
Real Sports,
RobertinSeattle,
Washington Post |

Aaron Hewitt: Dave at Home
Yesterday, I was reading a recent article on Bleacher Report titled Dear NFL: Eight Changes That Need to Be Made Now (click HERE to read their eight changes). It got me thinking again about the real changes that need to be made for retired players:
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Posted by
Dave Pear |
Categories:
Dave's Personal Posts,
News | Tagged:
Bleacher Report,
Dave Pear,
Dear NFL: Eight Changes That Need to Be Made Now,
Gene Upshaw,
Groom Law Group,
Ira Casson,
Michael Leahy,
NFL,
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell,
NFL Retirement Board,
NFLPA,
NFLPA Executive Director DeMaurice Smith,
RobertinSeattle,
The Pain Game,
Washington Post |

We still haven’t figured out if Gene Upshaw is just plain arrogant or just plain ignorant of the law. Maybe it’s a bit of both after all these years of running unchecked as head of the NFLPA and an officer of the AFL-CIO. And sometimes, there are so many flagrant violations – legal and otherwise – most of us tend to glaze over and miss most of them.
That was the case from way back in February when The Washington Post’s Michael Leahy wrote his piece The Pain Game (click to read the entire piece). But first, a little bit of background: In all of my requests to the NFL and the NFLPA, as well as to their attorneys – The Groom Law Group and Akin Gump – for documents pertaining to my case as well as general documents on the disability plans, there’s always more redacting on every page than a Watergate investigation. And all of it is supposedly done in the name of privacy and confidentiality in “protecting the names and personal information” of those who have applied for benefits.
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NPR interviewed Michael Leahy right after his piece came out in the Sunday Washington Post, The Pain Game, previously posted on this blog. From NPR’s site:
“Dozens of former pro football players say the NFL and the NFL players union should do more to help with pension and disability payments after their years of playing through pain and injury. Michael Leahy of the Washington Post tells the story of retired Super Bowl champion Dave Pear, who is disabled.”
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10th Request; Gene Upshaw; (Bert Bell/Pete Rozelle NFL Player Retirement Plan)
Feb 15, 2008
Dear Gene,
Please open (attached) and scroll down to the last paragraph. I will quote the wording, ” If you would like to review the official Retirement Plan document, please contact the Plan Administrative office at the above address.” When I follow these instructions I am told, “Contact The Groom Law Group”.
Question? Is The Groom Law Group now the Plan Administrator?
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From Page 26: The Washington Post Magazine February 3, 2008) – Super Bowl Sunday
Gene Upshaw: “Once he took that pension, that was it. He can’t get a disability (benefit). That’s not only the rule of the retirement plan — it’s the law.”
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Michael Leahy from the Washington Post: I ask if he is certain of that.
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Gene Upshaw: “Yes,” he answers. “It’s not just the NFL; it’s the law.”
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But it’s not the law, says the attorney Upshaw himself retained. Lanny Davis, in a separate interview, says the NFL could grant both a pension and a right to a disability payment. “It’s discretionary,” Davis says, “which is the way it is with most corporations.”
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Link to the Washington Post article HERE.
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Late last year, Washington Post writer, Michael Leahy, spent several days following Dave around to see just what his life is like on a day-to-day basis. His article also appeared as a cover article in the SuperBowl Sunday edition of The Post Sunday Magazine, along with another dramatic collection of photos taken by The Post’s Brian Smale. Read The Pain Game and check out the Slideshow in the sidebar.

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