- Washington Free Beacon - https://freebeacon.com -

Several NFL Players Who Protested National Anthem Sunday Have Arrest Records

Many of the National Football League players who participated in the protests against the national anthem and American flag on Sunday have had past run-ins with the law themselves.

In spite of their brushes with law enforcement and complaints about the criminal justice system, they are either currently making or did make a lucrative living in the league.

The 2016 NFL pre-season was the first time then-San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick decided to sit for the national anthem, later turning to kneeling on the sidelines.

Almost overnight, professional football became politicized. Kaepernick said that he was using his public position as an NFL player to bring light to the social injustices black Americans experience, particularly focusing on the high-profile cases of police brutality against black men.

Since then, several other players have joined in the demonstration, which has triggered praise and disappointment from both sides of the political spectrum as well as many football fans.

After President Donald Trump denounced the protests on Friday and tweeted about the issue numerous times, NFL players, owners, coaches, and even former players knelt, sat, linked arms, raised fists, or stayed in the locker room during the singing of "The Star Spangled Banner" on Sunday.

Some of those who participated in the protest have been arrested for a variety of crimes, including:

These arrest records only touch on past run-ins that protesting NFL players have had with law enforcement.

Trump's comments criticizing players who kneel for the national anthem appears to have triggered Sunday's spike in those joining the protest.

At a campaign rally for Alabama Sen. Luther Strange (R.) on Friday, Trump called for NFL owners to "get that son of a bitch off the field" if players kneel for the national anthem. Trump followed up those comments on Twitter, writing that players who disrespect the flag and the country by kneeling for the anthem should be fired or suspended.