Favre remains in Mississippi welfare lawsuit, judge rules
A Mississippi judge has ruled that retired NFL quarterback Brett Favre will remain as a defendant in a civil lawsuit that seeks to recover millions of dollars of misspent welfare money
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Your support makes all the difference.Retired NFL quarterback Brett Favre will remain as a defendant in a civil lawsuit that seeks to recover millions of dollars of misspent welfare money that was supposed to help some of the neediest people in the United States, a Mississippi judge ruled Monday.
Circuit Judge Faye Peterson wrote that Favre's attorneys made āunpersuasive and inapplicableā arguments in seeking to have him removed as one of more than three dozen people or businesses being sued by the Mississippi Department of Human Services.
āObviously, Brett Favre is disappointed in the court's ruling,ā his spokesman, Alex Pfeiffer, said in a statement Monday. āHis legal team is exploring their options.ā
Millions of federal welfare dollars for low-income Mississippi residents were squandered on projects supported by wealthy or well-connected people, including projects such as a college volleyball facility backed by Favre, prosecutors say.
No criminal charges have been brought against the NFL Hall of Famer, although other people have pleaded guilty to their part in the misspending.
The Department of Human Services lawsuit says money from the Temporary Assistance to Needy Families program was improperly spent, including on projects Favre supported: $5 million for a volleyball arena at the university where Favreās daughter played the sport and $1.7 million toward development of a concussion treatment drug.
Favreās attorneys had argued the Department of Human Services is suing Favre, āa Mississippi and national celebrity,ā to deflect from the departmentās own role in allowing fraud, and they filed multiple sets of papers seeking to have him dismissed from the suit.
State attorneys wrote in March that Favre's attorneys had given the court āa long press releaseā rather than legal arguments in trying to get him out of the lawsuit.