Paul Swann and Woody Woodrum interviewed the author of the Daily Beast article during the 2nd half of last night's show. Check out the podcast here- 05/07/15 Insider Sportsline Podcast
I find it hard to believe that a local cop just talked on the record with a reporter at a national web-only magazine for an hour.
Three huge red flags that I can't overlook:
1) the details and comment about the driver being a potential NFL guy with the draft so soon. That is just too creative and accurate to fabricate for the reporter. The huge link: just a few days ago, a day or two before the arrest, doc had an article written about him. The article centered around doc criticizing the NFL guys about some potential draft prospects getting hammered due to character/off the field issues while other star prospects avoid dropping in the draft. It shows that doc was not only well aware of it, but was the first head coach to call out the NFL for it and was at least extremely consicentious of it. Unless the daily beast writer somehow knew doc's quotes and feelings on that before the other publication did that article, it is a very related topic.
2) why would sperry suddenly have a gag order on him? If his quotes had been completely taken out of context or fabricated, fault would have been placed on the daily beast, not on sperry. It wouldn't have been sperry's fault.
3) if there were fabrications, at minimum, there would be threats of legal action against the daily beast. It wasn't a satire piece, sperry most likely wouldn't be considered an easily identifiable public figure, and damages related to any alleged false statements could very well be damaging to sperry, doc, hamrick, and Marshall. Fabrications and accusations mentioned in the article wouldn't just be ignored without attempts to justify the wrong, if in fact, the writer did something wrong.
4) the gazette reporter, point-blank, asked the chief if sperry had mentioned any of those concerns to him. Instead of simply squashing it and saying "no," he ignored directly answering it and said "that is my story." Why not just simply answer the most direct question about it?
I find it hard to believe that a local cop just talked on the record with a reporter at a national web-only magazine for an hour.