الثلاثاء، 14 سبتمبر 2010

Ines Sainz has supposedly accepted the New York Jets owner Woody Johnson's personal apology for his team's inappropriate behavior during a practice on Saturday.

The incident that occurred was: Ines Sainz entered the locker room, and the whole team started to make jokes about her, and they talked about her. She decided not to pay attention. She was going to have an interview, so she decided to focus on that, and not on what people were saying about her.

She said, on CBS News' "The Early Show," "But I believe that the rest of the media start to hear the different kind of things that I didn't hear. And sometime in a minute, a colleague [said], 'Come with me, and I'm so sorry...It's terrible. I feel sorry for you.' So I tried to say, 'Don't worry, I can handle the situation.' And that's it. And I don't even try to pay attention."

She was not happy with the situation, however, she tried to pretend not to feel bad, so she wouldn't look bad on her work. She is a veteran reporter for TV Azteca. She has been covering sports for nine years, and she says that she trusts the NFL, and thinks that they will take appropriate action as a result of the incident.

"I really believe in what NFL decide[s]," she told the morning show. "I really believe that they find that they need to punish someone, they are going to do it. And if they find if it's not necessary, I really trust in what they say."

She doesn't plan on pursuing further legal action in the case, however, that doesn't mean that it's all fun and games for the team. They could still be in some serious trouble.

Wendy Murphy, a victim's rights advocate and also a former prosecuting attorney, told The Early Show that she thinks that if people around her saw what happened as sexual harassment, it could mean trouble for the team. This applies even if Sainz doesn't want to file a lawsuit.

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