beautydigger said:
No I didn`t, creditable source please.
Here BD,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spygate
Accusations against the Jets
Accusations of Jets also illegally videotaping the Patriots in their January 2007 playoff match-up arose following the incident. Jets general manager
Mike Tannenbaum called the accusations "completely false" in September 2007.
[27] In the week before the teams` December 16, 2007 game, Newsday reported the Jets were found videotaping from the mezzanine level of Gillette Stadium and asked to leave by Patriots security.[28] The Jets later claimed they had been granted permission by the Patriots to film in the game, while Belichick denied permission was ever given.[29]
Oh well...so they claimed they "had permission". Yeah, that makes it all okay huh...bwahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!
http://wbztv.com/patriots/New.England.Patriots.2.609434.html
Mangini Admits Jets Taped Patriots Last Season
NEW YORK (WBZ) ― Its not quite 007 James Bond versus Goldfinger, but this weekend`s Patriots Jets game could be a different type of spy vs. spy.
New York Newsday is reporting that the Jets were caught spying & videotaping the Patriots last season.
The newspaper, sighting " league sources familiar with the situation", says the Jets were caught using taping during a game in Foxborough last season.
Here`s the difference though: The Patriots apparently didn`t report it to the NFL and instead just had the offending employee removed.
According to the article, after Gillette Stadium officials saw the Jets employee using the video recorder early in the game, he was
told to stop and to leave the area. He had been filming from the mezzanine level between the scoreboard and a decorative lighthouse in an end zone. The camera was not confiscated by the Patriots or stadium security.
The Newsday report says
the Jets admit they did it, but claim they had permission to do so. Tuesday night the Jets admitted that they did videotape the game and their employee was confronted, but said they had permission from the Patriots to film from that location.
"All filming at last year`s Patriots game was done with pre-approval from the Patriots and in accordance with NFL rules," Jets` Senior Director of Media Relations, Bruce Speight told the paper.
On Wednesday Jets coach Eric Mangini said his team received permission to film behind both end zones during the playoff game in January.
"We taped the game, is what we taped, and we taped end-zone copy of the game, and we tape a double end zone, which is standard operating procedure for us," Mangini said.
"We request that every single road game, and it`s usually granted if physically it`s possible. And when people request it from us, we do the same thing: We grant it."
Mangini maintained the Jets did nothing wrong, and had filmed at New England during the regular season without incident. It was nothing like what the Patriots did earlier this season, when a New England employee was caught taping New York`s defensive signals and the team was punished by the league.
"We do it every time we go on the road," Mangini repeated. "We ask for permission to do it. It`s within the league rules, and when people ask us to do it, we grant it, as well."
Just one problem, if that`s true them why did the Pats have the cameraman booted?
When asked why the Patriots stopped the Jets if they had already given them permission, Mangini just shrugged.
"I don`t know," he said. "Really, it just was what it was. We had asked for permission, it was granted and then that changed, and we respect their decision. It`s their stadium."
Mangini was also asked if the Jets were, at all, taping the Patriots` defensive signals. "No," Mangini said smugly.
He was then asked if the Patriots requested similar permission to have someone taping at various angles or end-zone angles. Again, Mangini replied simply: "No."
So far the Patriots have declined to comment on the report, instead saying they`re focusing on the present and this weekend`s game, and not the past.
New England coach Bill Belichick refused to address the situation during his news conference with Patriots reporters. "There`s a lot of things that have happened in the past," Belichick said. "Really, the past is in the past."
"It just doesn`t matter. Who cares?" safety Rodney Harrison said when asked about the situation by reporters. "It has no impact whatsoever, just like when Smith made his comments. It has no impact. The game isn`t won or lost through the media Monday through Saturday. It`s won or lost on Sunday, 1 o`clock. It`s whoever makes more plays."
The Jets played at Gillette Stadium twice last season, once during the regular season and once during the playoffs. According to the report, there`s some disagreement over which game the incident happened at.
One source familiar with the Patriots` situation told Newsday the filming occurred in the regular-season game; while a source close to the Jets` situation told the paper it was the playoff game, as Manigni said on Wednesday.
An NFL source told Newsday the league office is unaware of the incident, and that the Patriots didn`t bring it up during the "Spygate" investigation in September.
Newsday also sights a Foxsports.com article in which Jets General Manager, Mike Tannenbaum vehemently denied rumors that surfaced last year that the Jets had illegally videotaped the Patriots.
A person familiar with the situation told Newsday Tuesday night that the Jets wanted to acquire a second end-zone angle for
both games in Foxborough.
This of course comes to light after New England was caught using video to spy on Jets assistant coaches during the season opener in September.
Patriots coach Bill Belichick was fined $500,000 by NFL commissioner Roger Goodell and the team was fined $250,000 for violating a league rule that prohibits clubs from using a video camera on the sidelines for any purpose, including recording signals relayed to opposing players on the field. New England must also forfeit its own 2008 first-round draft pick.
A video camera aimed at Jets coaches was confiscated from a Patriots employee during the first quarter of the team`s 38-14 win Sept. 9 over New York. Jets coach Eric Mangini has had a cool relationship with Belichick since leaving as Patriots defensive coordinator after the 2005 season.
New England is 13-0 after routing Pittsburgh on Sunday, while the Jets are 3-10. The Patriots opened up as a record 27 point favorite to beat the Jets; that number is now down to 24.
(© 2008 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
ROFLMAO,
Korbel
PS
You asked for it.