Richie Incognito remained defiant to the end.
Of his Twitter account.
Attorney Ted Wells' investigation into Miami Dolphins offensive tackle Jonathan Martin's allegations that he was bullied by offensive guard Richie Incognito and other Dolphins teammates went public on Friday.
After support for Incognito started gaining traction with reports that Martin gave as good as he got in tweet exchanges and was portrayed as enjoying in the fun in public with Incognito, the Wells investigation back Martin's original claim that the Dolphins, indeed, had a culture of bullying with Incognito as the ringmaster and guard John Jerry and center Mike Pouncey were his henchmen.
"To be candid, we struggled with how to evaluate Martin's claims of harassment given his mental health issues, his possible heightened sensitivity to insults and his unusual, 'bipolar' friendship with Incognito," Wells' report read, according to CBSSports.com. "Nonetheless, we ultimately concluded that Martin was indeed harassed by Incognito, who can fairly be described as the main instigator, and by Jerry and Pouncey, who tended to follow Incognito's lead."
According to thevictoryformation.com, Incognito fired off a few condescending tweets at the report.
He then took some shots at the media.
Incognito then reversed course from his tweet tirade of a few days ago when he blasted Martin by returning to the claim that he was Martin's friend.
Apparently satisfied he'd done enough damage, Incognito signed off and deleted his Twitter account, thevictoryformation reported.
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