Chiefs release Kareem Hunt after video of February incident released
8:10 PM CT
ESPN
The Chiefs have released star running back Kareem Hunt, a decision that came after video surfaced earlier Friday that showed him shoving a woman in February.
The team announced the move Friday night. Minutes earlier, the NFL had announced that Hunt had been placed on the commissioner's exempt list.
"Earlier this year, we were made aware of an incident involving running back Kareem Hunt," the Chiefs said in the statement. "At that time, the National Football League and law enforcement initiated investigations into the issue. As part of our internal discussions with Kareem, several members of our management team spoke directly to him. Kareem was not truthful in those discussions. The video released today confirms that fact. We are releasing Kareem immediately."
In the video published by TMZ earlier Friday, Hunt is seen shoving and kicking a woman at a Cleveland hotel where Hunt had an apartment. The incident had been previously reported by multiple outlets, but Friday was the first time the video was publicized.
Hunt and the woman trade words in a hallway and are separated by several people on multiple occasions, TMZ showed. Hunt pushes the woman, who responds by hitting him in the face. Two men escort Hunt down a hallway before he charges out, colliding with a man who then knocks the woman over. Hunt also kicks the woman in the leg.
Police were called to the scene, but no arrests were made or charges filed.
Through body-cam footage obtained by TMZ, the woman and witnesses gave differing accounts of what escalated the incident. She told police that she wouldn't have sex with one of the men with Hunt, while they said she called him the N-word after being asked to leave Hunt's hotel room.
TMZ reported that prosecutors had access to the surveillance video at The Metropolitan at the 9, and the hotel, in a statement to ABC News, said it is assisting in the investigation.
The NFL placed Hunt on the commissioner's exempt list earlier Friday night, meaning if another team does sign him, he can't play in or attend games until the investigation is over and a decision on potential discipline is made. He would not count against the team's 53-man roster.
"The NFL's investigation, which began immediately following the incident in February, will include a review of the new information that was made public today," the league said.
Sources told ESPN's Adam Schefter that neither the NFL nor the Chiefs had viewed the video before it became public Friday. The league made multiple attempts to obtain it. The hotel told NFL representatives that it was corporate policy only to turn video over to law enforcement and therefore could not provide it to the league.
The NFL also contacted the Cleveland Police Department, which did not provide the league any video. Even though no charges were filed by law enforcement, the NFL continued its investigation, which included contacting the alleged victims, but they did not respond to multiple messages.
Hunt was at practice on Friday but was sent home from the facility and excused from team activities after the release of video, sources told ESPN's Dan Graziano.
The Chiefs have an AFC-best 9-2 record entering Sunday's matchup with the Oakland Raiders.
Hunt led the NFL in rushing as a rookie with 1,327 yards and eight touchdowns in helping Kansas City make the playoffs. This season, he has run for 824 yards and seven touchdowns in 11 games and has seven TDs receiving.
But the former Toledo star has had trouble off the field, including the February incident and another in which he was accused of punching a man. Asked in August about them, Hunt said he had "learned from it" and was focused on football.