Cameron Sutton was within the Detroit Lions’ exercise facility final week when the group came upon in regards to the warrant for his arrest, group president Rod Wooden mentioned Monday.
Wooden, talking from the NFL’s league conferences in Orlando, Florida, informed Fox 2 in Detroit {that a} member of the group was in a position to discuss with Sutton and advise him to show himself in. The Lions launched Sutton the following day.
“Instructed he get counsel and do the suitable factor to show himself in,” Wooden informed the tv station. “After that, we met the remainder of the day and the next morning to determine to launch him.”
Wooden mentioned Sutton “simply kinda confirmed up unexpectedly to work out. We have been in a position to discuss to him in particular person — not me, however different members of the workers — and he left the constructing. We launched him the following day, and nobody has spoken to him since.”
The Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Workplace made their warrant for Sutton public final week as authorities have been unable to find Sutton since March 7, when the arrest warrant was issued. Sutton is dealing with a cost of home battery by strangulation, a third-degree felony punishable by as much as 5 years in jail.
Sutton, 29, joined the Lions as an unrestricted free agent final 12 months on a three-year, $33 million contract after spending his first six NFL seasons with the Pittsburgh Steelers. Wooden informed Fox 2 that, “it was a troublesome determination” to launch Sutton, “nevertheless it was the suitable determination.”
“We’re simply shifting on. I need to make sure that everyone is aware of, we did not launch him due to something associated to the cap or cash that we could owe him. It was the suitable factor to do for the group.
“We did launch him with a post-June 1 designation, which is able to enable us to cope with regardless of the cap implications are over two seasons versus one. And we’ll let the method between us, him and the union play out to find out precisely what occurs. However cash was not on my thoughts after we made our choices.”