Tagliabue’s Testimony Continues

(March 14, 2001) — NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue continued his testimony on Wednesday in Superior Court in Los Angeles in the trial of the Oakland Raiders against the NFL and 15 NFL clubs.

Tagliabue has been on the stand since late Tuesday afternoon, when he was called as the first witness. Carolina Panthers owner Jerry Richardson, chairman of the NFL Stadium Committee, is the next scheduled witness.

The Raiders claim that the NFL in 1995 interfered with the team's opportunity to build a stadium at Hollywood Park, right outside Los Angeles. The Raiders also assert that they own the Los Angeles market and the NFL may not place a team there without paying the Raiders for doing so.

The NFL, however, says that the other NFL clubs worked hard to help — not hinder — the Raiders with their stadium proposal at Hollywood Park. The NFL also says that under NFL rules the right to place a team in Los Angeles, or any other city, is a collective right of all member clubs, not just the Raiders.

Under California law, a verdict requires a minimum three-quarters vote of the jury, which is comprised of eight men and four women. The trial is expected to last 4-6 weeks.