NFL kicker Justin Tucker going through multiple allegations of sexual misconduct is a bad omen for the Ravens.



Tucker, who has no longer been charged criminally or named in a civil lawsuit, has denied the allegations. He called the accusations "unequivocally false" in an X (previously Twitter) post and accused The Banner of publishing "desperate tabloid fodder."


What can the NFL do with the Ravens' kicker?


Tucker no longer needs to stand for crooked fees for the NFL to take disciplinary action. Below the private behavior coverage, gamers can be punished for movements deemed harmful to others, together with sexual misconduct.


"There's a technique for that, both civil and probably criminal," NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell stated regarding Tucker's scenario. "We glaringly have NFL investigations for that, too. We manifestly have a look at that where we don't need to intervene with the crooked facet of that. We can look at the ones with issues. They may be glaringly serious problems."


Appreciably, Cleveland Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson was suspended 11 games and fined $five million in 2022 regardless of never being criminally charged.


A spokesperson for the Baltimore Ravens later stated, "We take any allegations of this nature seriously." Slicing Tucker earlier than june 1 would price the Ravens $7.5 million in useless cap space. A put-up-June one designation would create $4.2 million in savings; however, it would nevertheless result in cap penalties over a couple of years.



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