In a statement released Wednesday, James and the other attorneys general asked victims and witnesses of discrimination at the N.F.L. to file complaints with her office. Often, civil investigations into workplaces open after employees or former employees have filed complaints directly with attorneys general. Joining New York were Illinois, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Oregon and Washington State.
In response to the February report, the N.F.L. disputed that women, and particularly women of color, were sidelined or that the league was insensitive to the issues of gender and racial inequality.
“We share the commitment of the attorneys general to ensuring that all of our workplaces — including the league office and 32 clubs — are diverse, inclusive and free from discrimination and harassment,” the league said in a statement on Wednesday, adding that it intends to share “the policies, practices, protocols, education programs and partnerships” put in place to address its workplace culture.
The letter from the attorneys general came as the N.F.L. is facing a congressional inquiry into the workplace treatment of female employees at its Washington franchise and a discrimination lawsuit by Brian Flores, an Afro Latino man and the former coach of the Miami Dolphins, who said the league flouted its rules requiring teams to interview a diverse range of candidates for coaching and general manager positions.
Flores was fired by the Miami Dolphins at the end of the 2021 season and, with no head coaching offers, was hired as an assistant defensive coach by the Pittsburgh Steelers. A pretrial conference for his federal lawsuit is scheduled to be held on April 29.