July 3, 2024

NY Jets' Sauce Gardner on his rank among CBs, 2024 goals

Antonio Cromartie returns to Jets as Bill Walsh coaching fellow

Antonio Cromartie is back with the Jets.

The former Pro Bowl cornerback announced on social media that he will be a Bill Walsh diversity coaching fellow for this year’s training camp.

“I’m grateful for the opportunity I have to do the Bill Walsh internship with [the Jets] for fall camp,” Cromartie wrote. “Ready [to] learn as much as I can during this time. Thank you Coach Saleh and your staff for this opportunity!!!”

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Cromartie, 40, played for the Jets from 2010-2013 and returned for the 2015 season. In 78 games for the club, he recorded 63 passes defensed with 13 interceptions — making the Pro Bowl in 2012 and 2013.

This will be Cromartie’s second time serving as a coaching intern for the Jets, as he also served in the role back in 2018 under previous head coach Todd Bowles.

Cromartie has also previously served as a graduate assistant under Jimbo Fisher at Texas A&M.

A first-round pick in 2006, Cromartie played 162 games with 137 starts through 2016 for the Chargers, Jets, Cardinals, and Colts, recording 31 career interceptions with three pick-sixes. He led the league with 10 interceptions in 2007.

Antonio Cromartie returns to Jets as Bill Walsh coaching fellow - NBC Sports

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Biden DOJ Plans To Cut Deal With Boeing After Fatal Crashes

The Department of Justice (DOJ) plans to allow Boeing to avoid a trial if they plead guilty to fraud charges for deaths involving 737 Max jets , according to The New York Times.

The DOJ is reportedly offering Boeing a deal to plead guilty to a fraud charge in order to avoid a criminal trial, provided the corporation agrees to pay a $244 million fine, safety improvements

Ex-Jets CB Antonio Cromartie Joins Staff on Bill Walsh Internship

agree to three years of oversight and a meeting between board members and the crash victim’s families, according to the NYT. The fraud charge stemmed from 2021 when the company settled a case in which it was accused of defrauding the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) after 2 fatal crashes of Boeing 737 Max jets that killed 346 people in 2018 and 2019.

“The families will strenuously object to this plea deal,” Paul Cassell, legal counsel for the victims families, said according to the NYT. “The memory of 346 innocents killed by Boeing demands more justice than this.”

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