@DREW76 said in [Signing Suggestions & Rumours](/post/1107061) said:
The NRL is today dealing with another potential off-season scandal following the overnight arrest of Canberra Raiders’ star recruit Curtis Scott.
Club officials have yet to inform the NRL integrity unit that Scott was locked up in Sydney overnight following an incident with police after a boozy Australia Day celebration.
He is facing charges of resisting arrest after being approached by police in the Moore Park area.
Raiders coach Ricky Stuart was informed of the drama at 9.45am today.
Scott joined the Raiders after being granted an early release by Storm, two years before his contract expired.
It is a blow for the Raiders who released another centre Joey Leilua to the Wests Tigers over the weekend.
The former Melbourne Storm star has spent the long weekend in Sydney catching up with family and old mates.
He also had drama on Saturday night at the Clovelly Hotel where he was searched on the footpath outside the premises in a random police drug check.
He was found to have had nothing in his possession, according to his manager Sam Ayoub.
The Daily Telegraph is awaiting comment from the Raiders and NSW Police.
Only last week Scott spoke in a Fox Sports interview about why he enjoyed playing for a club outside of Sydney.
“(Signing with Canberra) was to stay out of the Sydney rat-race and the Sydney fishbowl,” he said, “It’s a good place to just concentrate on footy and at the moment, that’s the most important thing – apart from my family – that’s going on in my life,”
So let me get this straight, the tweet that went out yesterday morning regarding Scott was in relation to an incident on Sat which he was later cleared. Instead of taking caution, he has since been arrested for an entirely different situation?
Is he trying to get out of a bad contract with Canberra?
Night two, if it was as reported, was utter stupidity and might be the end of his career. You don't punch a cop and expect leniency.
But the reporting of the previous night is what irks me about the media.
Being randomly searched for drugs (presumably so were hundreds of others) and having nothing found is NOT "being involved in an incident". It is a deliberate choice of language to misrepresent what happened.