There has been no indication when the N.F.L. will complete its investigation of Watson for potential violations of its personal conduct policy. League investigators were waiting for a resolution in the criminal cases to interview Watson but have already spoken to several of the women who filed complaints against him.
Watson reportedly also met this week with the Falcons, Panthers and Saints. Because Watson had to waive his no-trade clause before a deal could be made, the trade talks played out more like a bidding war, even as the 22 lawsuits filed against him continued to move ahead. Watson also sought to have his compensation guaranteed by his new team, but the Browns went a step further, giving Watson a new and fully guaranteed five-year, $230 million contract, a person with direct knowledge of the terms of the deal confirmed. That person requested anonymity because the team had not announced the contract terms.
Between meetings with N.F.L. teams, Watson was deposed on Tuesday for two of the civil suits. Tony Buzbee, the lawyer for the 22 plaintiffs, said in an interview Tuesday evening that Watson did not invoke his Fifth Amendment right not to self-incriminate in Tuesday’s depositions and answered questions under oath for the first time. Buzbee said last Friday’s grand jury decision hasn’t affected his clients’ willingness to move forward with their civil cases, nor have there been any renewed settlement conversations. He added that no N.F.L. teams had reached out to him for information on the cases or to seek to talk with any of the women.
Baker Mayfield, the No. 1 overall pick by the Browns in 2018, posted to Twitter on Tuesday evening what was essentially a farewell letter to Cleveland after news broke of Watson’s meeting with the Browns. Mayfield was the starting quarterback for the Browns when the franchise broke its 17-year postseason drought, but the team had not sought to sign him to a second contract. He is not part of the Browns’ trade package but is expected to be moved to another team.
The trade ends an impasse between Watson and the Texans that dates back to early 2021, when the quarterback demanded to be moved to a new team after having grown disillusioned with the franchise’s direction.