Let’s make it a Mock Draft Monday. It has been a couple of weeks since the Cleveland Browns ended their season with a 3-14 record. The best thing the Browns had to take away from the season is their draft positioning and finally having a first-round pick again.
Cleveland’s fight to keep the Browns from moving from their downtown home into a proposed dome in the suburbs has taken yet another legal turn.
This week, the City of Cleveland (the City) and the State of Ohio (the State) took several key actions in the battle to prevent the Cleveland
Cleveland officials on Tuesday sued the Cleveland Browns over the team's plans to move the downtown stadium to Brook Park.
The Cleveland Browns certainly have their fair share of questions this offseason, but none are bigger than the quarterback position and what they will do. They could go the veteran route and acquire someone like Kirk Cousins or Sam Darnold,
The lawsuit comes just a few months after the Browns filed their own complaint challenging the constitutionality of the state law in federal court
In August, the Browns announced their intentions to move to Brook Park, which is about 13 miles southwest of the current stadium, because it was “their most compelling option.” The team described it as a $2.4 billion project, which was later revealed to include a domed stadium.
Ohio Attorney General Chief Counsel Bridget Coontz and Justin Herdman, an attorney hired by the city, asked in court filings that U.S. District Judge David Ruiz dismiss the Browns’ case and instead allow the fight to play out over a separate lawsuit that the city filed in Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court on Tuesday.
To Case Western Reserve University law professor Eric Chaffee, there’s one big takeaway from Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost’s decision to enter the battle between the Cleveland Browns and the City of Cleveland. “It means the state is willing to take a side here — and it does want the Browns to remain in Cleveland,” Chaffee said.
The lawsuit comes after the Browns told the city they will not comply with the Modell Law. The lawsuit says Cleveland taxpayers have invested $350 million into the Browns current
After accepting more than $350 million of taxpayer money, the Cleveland Browns are violating state law and their contract agreements with the City.'
The city of Cleveland has filed a lawsuit against the Browns over the team's proposed move to a new stadium in the Brook Park suburb. In the lawsuit filed