HOUSTON (AP) — Former Dallas Maverick Roy Tarpley filed a federal lawsuit Wednesday, claiming the NBA and the team violated the Americans with Disabilities Act by refusing to reinstate him to the league.
Tarpley, who was permanently banned from the NBA in 1995, claimed in his lawsuit the NBA and the Mavericks discriminated against him on the basis of his disability as a recovering drug and alcohol abuser.
"Tarpley is a qualified individual with a disability within the meaning of the ADA, in that he has a disability in the form of past drug and alcohol abuse, which substantially limits at least one of his major life activities," according to the 46-page lawsuit, which was filed in Houston federal court.
It’s certainly unfortunate that he suffers from problems with an addiction (or as it has been legally classified, a disability) but it seems to me the only “discrimination” that took place was a decision that was within the NBA’s rights given their anti-drug policy and Tarpley’s multiple violations.
Tarpley, 42, said the lawsuit is not about trying to play again but about clearing his name.
And reportedly at one point, about gaining $6 million in damages as well.
In the lawsuit, Tarpley said after applying for reinstatement he successfully completed 52 weeks of drug and alcohol testing, which the NBA had requested. But his reinstatement was still denied, according to his attorneys.
"What he went through and the hoops that he went through to comply with what the NBA wanted and how the NBA treated him was just downright wrong, unfair, and cruel," Joe Walker, one of Tarpley's attorneys, told KRIV. "We're making the NBA and the Mavericks accountable for the way they treated him."
I guess it comes down to the NBA’s policy on reinstating banned players but perhaps completing such testing only qualifies a player for consideration to be reinstated, after which the NBA will hand down its final decision. I love the fact that Tarpley and his attorneys are claiming that making him go through 52 weeks of sobriety was “downright wrong, unfair and cruel” though. I mean, to think he fought his addiction and it was all for nothing!
But since the NBA and the Mavericks are to be held accountable for the way they treated him, perhaps Tarpley should be held accountable for his actions, too. After all, it was his choice to abuse drugs and ruin his NBA career. It was his own actions that led to suspensions and bans from the league. The Mavericks continued to pay him in 1992/1993, 1993/1994 and 1994/1995 despite the ban. That’s money they had invested him (not to mention a lottery pick in 1986) that ultimately went to waste. The lawsuit contends that the NBA and the Mavericks treated him poorly, yet no responsibility is taken for the position Tarpley placed the Mavericks in with the choices he made or the damage he did to his own life and career.