The family of former NHL player Derek Boogaard, who died of an
accidental overdose of pain medication and alcohol, has filed a wrongful-death
lawsuit against the NHL, blaming it for brain damage he suffered during his
playing career and painkiller addiction.
Boogaard was found dead May 13, 2011, and was posthumously diagnosed with
chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a degenerative brain ailment that can be
caused by repeated blows to the head, according to the 55-page lawsuit filed in
Chicago on Friday.
"He was there protecting his teammates at all costs, but who was there to
protect him?" Joanne Boogaard, Derek's mother, said in a statement release by
her attorneys.
"Prior to and during Derek Boogaard's career, the NHL knew, or should have
known, that the Enforcers/Fighters in the NHL had an increased risk of brain
damage due to concussive and sub-concussive brain trauma and were particularly
susceptible to addiction issues," the lawsuit reads.
Boogaard was an enforcer during his career, whose main job was to deter dirty
play by the opposition and to protect his team's best players.
Boogaard scored only three goals in 277 regular-season games but took part in at
least 66 on-ice fights.
According to the lawsuit, Boogaard received 1,021 prescriptions from NHL team
physicians, dentists, trainers and staff while playing for the Minnesota Wild
during the 2008-09 season.
NHL Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly told the Associated Press in an email Sunday
night that the league had not received the lawsuit and generally does not
comment on pending litigation. The suit was filed in Illinois in part because
the NHL has a business interest in the state through the Chicago Blackhawks and
Boogaard "engaged in on-ice fights during his NHL career" in Chicago, the filing
says.
Boogaard was under contract with the New York Rangers at the time of his death.
He played his first five NHL seasons with the Minnesota Wild and one season with
the Rangers after signing a four-year, $6.5 million contract with New York in
July 2010. Boogaard, who was 28 when he died, sustained a concussion during his
last game on Dec. 9, 2010.
___
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Derek Boogaard's Family Sues NHL
May 13, 2013
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