The NFL may not be releasing the 650,000 or so emails that were part of the investigation into the Washington Football Team’s toxic workplace environment. But, leaks are falling through the cracks.

Monday the drama blew over for Jon Gruden, as a number of disparaging emails from 2011-2018 to then-Washington Football Team general manager and team president Bruce Allen were revealed. Gruden resigned as a result Monday evening as the Las Vegas Raiders head coach.

At the time of the emails Gruden was an analyst for ESPN, working their Monday Night Football broadcast. Late Tuesday evening it was revealed another ESPN personality has been roped into the Washington investigation.

According to Sam Farmer and Nathan Fenno of The Los Angeles Times, NFL insider Adam Schefter established an informal relationship with Allen. That included him sending an entire story in July 2011 to Allen, calling him “Mr. Editor” in an email submitted by attorneys of Washington owner Dan Snyder in a defamation suit against a publication in India.

Several emails between Allen and journalists are part of the filing too. In one of them from July 2011, ESPN NFL Insider Adam Schefter sent Allen the draft of an unpublished story that was published later the same day.

“Please let me know if you see anything that should be added, changed, tweaked,” Schefter wrote. “Thanks, Mr. Editor, for that and the trust. Plan to file this to espn about 6 am ….”

It’s been long rumored that Allen was a favorite source for inside stories involving Washington during his tenure there. Now there is evidence. More importantly it appears Schefter has been compromised. At least that’s the way many have already taken it. 

ESPN did release a statement in response to the LA Times report.

ESPN released the following statement in response to the correspondence: “Without sharing all the specifics of the reporter’s process for a story from 10 years ago during the NFL lockout, we believe that nothing is more important to Adam and ESPN than providing fans the most accurate, fair and complete story.”

It appears ESPN is standing by Schefter, at least publicly. Meanwhile, Gruden’s career appears to be over after his racial, homophobic and misogynistic comments in emails to Allen.

Allen being employed by Washington has dragged in two people, who were never employed by the franchise in question. Yet, the NFL has not revealed any findings from the Beth Wilkinson investigation into the Washington Football Team despite requests from former employees and the NFLPA.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Timberwolves chew up Nuggets to force Game 7
Rangers secure spot in conference finals after stunning third-period comeback over Hurricanes
Xander Schauffele makes history in first round of PGA Championship
Yankees' Hal Steinbrenner shares massive Juan Soto contract update
Steelers' Cameron Heyward addresses contract holdout
Knicks star ruled out for potential closeout game
Dodgers starter undergoes season-ending UCL surgery
Clemson’s Dabo Swinney gives smug response about not using transfer portal
Caitlin Clark's debut was most-watched WNBA game in more than 20 years
Watch: Chris Kreider's natural third-period hat trick shatters Hurricanes' comeback hopes
Veteran NFL safety will either play for this team or retire in 2024
Former Red Wings head coach linked to open NHL job
How Patriots' Drake Maye has already impressed Jacoby Brissett
LeBron James, Giannis Antetokounmpo, Stephen Curry among Forbes' highest-paid athletes for 2024
Steve Cohen addresses if Mets could again be trade-deadline sellers
Tiger Woods ruins strong first round with sloppy finish at PGA Championship
NFL responds to speculation about Chiefs schedule and Taylor Swift
Despite hopes for change, NASCAR championship weekend will return to Phoenix in 2025
Chiefs will achieve something not done since 1927 with 2024 schedule
Yankees' Aaron Judge comments on resurgence after bad slump