The Cleveland Browns legal challenge in federal court over its proposed move from downtown to Brook Park should be tossed out, the Ohio Attorney General’s Office and City of Cleveland argued on Wednesday.
Cleveland's fight to keep the Browns from moving from downtown and into a proposed dome in the suburbs has taken yet another legal turn. The city has filed a lawsuit to stop the NFL team from leaving Cleveland's lakefront when its stadium lease expires after the 2028 season.
The Browns don't just have questions about their offense going into the offseason. They also have questions on defense, such as these three.
In August, the Browns announced their intentions to move to Brook Park, which is about 13 miles southwest of the current stadium, because it was “their most compelling option.” The team described it as a $2.4 billion project, which was later revealed to include a domed stadium.
Cleveland officials on Tuesday sued the Cleveland Browns over the team's plans to move the downtown stadium to Brook Park.
To Case Western Reserve University law professor Eric Chaffee, there’s one big takeaway from Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost’s decision to enter the battle between the Cleveland Browns and the City of Cleveland. “It means the state is willing to take a side here — and it does want the Browns to remain in Cleveland,” Chaffee said.
It’s budget season, so the lobbyists are out in full swing. Tennessee Billionaire and Gas Station Tycoon Jimmy Haslam, known up here as the owner of the Cleveland Browns, is purportedly drumming up support among lawmakers for a $600 million subsidy for a new Browns stadium and that money could be proposed as soon as
In October, the Browns sought out clarification on the Modell Law, which was passed in 1996 and used in the prevention of the MLS’ Columbus Crew from leaving Ohio for Texas in 2019. Cleveland ...
The city of Cleveland has filed a lawsuit against the Cleveland Browns in an effort to keep the team playing their home games on the lakefront.
The lawsuit comes just a few months after the Browns filed their own complaint challenging the constitutionality of the state law in federal court
Changes are coming to the Cleveland Browns quarterback room this offseason. That may come in the form of a shiny new rookie that the team can select with the No
The suit, filed Tuesday in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, seeks to invoke the "Modell ... AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki, File In early August, the city of Cleveland offered the Browns a $1.2 billion proposal ...