Report: Dan Snyder to buy out minority owners' stake in Washington Football Team

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The spat between Washington Football Team owner Daniel Snyder and his three minority partners appears to be nearing an end.

NFL reporter Tyler Dunne tweeted Wednesday morning Snyder would buy out the 40 percent stake controlled by Frederick W. Smith (10 percent), Dwight Schar (15 percent), and Robert Rothman (15 percent), who had been looking to sell their stake since the spring of 2020.

Dunne added the NFL finance committee had approved a "debt waiver" of $450 million for Snyder to fund the deal.

Mike Florio of ProFootballTalk confirmed the report, adding the deal is "not official yet" and could be finalized when the owners vote to approve it next week.

Florio added the total sale of the stake would be $950 million, which is $50 million higher than a figure the minority owners accepted when they attempted to sell to a California-based investment group in late 2020. Snyder blocked the sale.

The deal could also have potential implications on the ongoing investigation into Washington's workplace culture being conducted by attorney Beth Wilkinson. According to Florio, Snyder's request to exceed the debt limit, and the league approving that move, is being interpreted as a sign that Snyder won't be forced to sell the team as a result of Wilkinson's investigation.

In a statement to The Washington Post, league spokesman Brian McCarthy clarified the debt waiver and Wilkinson investigation are "two separate matters," and the review of the claims about the team's workplace culture is ongoing.

According to The New York Times, Snyder will pay $875 million to acquire full ownership "while he pays a fine for executives' misconduct."

Snyder and his minority owners had been locked in a months-long dispute that resulted in numerous lawsuits in federal court in America and at least one in India.

In June of last year, Snyder kicked the three other owners off the team's board, possibly as a result of them informing him of their desire to sell. A report from The New York Times in September indicated some of the minority owners may have soured on Snyder after he halted paying annual dividend checks.

In one case, from Nov. 2020, the minority owners sued Snyder over claims he had interfered with them selling their minority stake to a pair of California investors for a discounted price of $900 million.

Snyder countered by claiming in a suit filed in U.S. District Court that he is a victim of extortion and that minority team owner Dwight Schar was trying to force him to sell the franchise. This suit stems from reporting by The Washington Post on the multiple allegations of sexual harassment and workplace culture which tolerated that kind of behavior.

Snyder alleged Schar had knowledge there was no evidence of wrongdoing but still “threatened to reveal [the settlement] to discredit me and embarrass my family, but which the insurance carrier decided to settle.”

In India, Snyder filed a defamation lawsuit, in which his attorneys claim the company, MEA WorldWide, published a series of false stories as a part of a smear campaign. That suit alleges the involvement of Schar and John Moag, the founder of Moag & Co., the Baltimore-based firm which was hired by the three minority owners to facilitate the sale of their stake.

Florio further reports Snyder, as part of the purchase, has agreed to waive any claims against his current minority partners.

Court documents, in that case, revealed Moag and former Washington team president Bruce Allen exchanged 87 phone calls for a total of more than 22 hours of conversation during a 10-month period from January to Nov. 2020.

According to an 18-page legal filing first reported by AJ Perez in February, the two also exchanged text and emails that "prove" the pair were "focused on negative publicity" directed at Snyder.

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