Texas Rangers asked to help find Brady jersey
Texas’ Lieutenant Governor has asked the Texas Rangers to aid the Houston Police Department in its investigation of Tom Brady’s missing jersey, which disappeared following Super Bowl LI.
“In Texas we place a very high value on hospitality and football. Tom Brady’s jersey has great historical value and is already being called ‘the most valuable NFL collectable ever.’ It will likely go into the Hall of Fame one day,” Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said in a statement.
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Tom Brady said he thinks Patriots RB James White deserves the MVP truck, similar to how the five-time Super Bowl champion gave the truck he won to Malcolm Butler two years ago.
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Patriots coach Bill Belichick spoke passionately Monday morning about the idea that quarterback Tom Brady might have been fueled by vengeance this season in the wake of Deflategate.
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“It is important that history does not record that it was stolen in Texas. I’ve called Colonel Steve McCraw to ask that the Texas Rangers work with the Houston Police Department on this case.
“I’m a Texans and Cowboys fan first, but the unquestionable success of the Super Bowl in Houston last night was a big win for our entire state and I don’t want anything to mar that victory. Whoever took this jersey should turn it in. The Texas Rangers are on the trail.”
The Texas Rangers is a division in the Texas Department of Public Safety, comprised of 222 employees (162 Rangers and 62 support personnel), that, according to their website, leads “major incident crime investigations, unsolved crime/serial crime investigations, public corruption and public integrity investigations, officer involved shooting investigations, and border security operations.”
Ken Goldin of Goldin Auctions, based in New Jersey, told the New York Post that the jersey could be worth as much as $500,000 or nothing if it is not soon located and authenticated as the jersey Brady wore in the Patriots’ epic comeback victory.
“If I could give some legal advice to whoever has this, I’d hire a lawyer, turn it over to that lawyer, see if there’s a reward and be happy with it,” Goldin told the newspaper.
“This can’t be sold publicly right now, because there’s nobody who doesn’t know this was stolen.”
Brady on Monday called the missing jersey an “unfortunate” situation.
“I put it in the bag, and I came out and it wasn’t there anymore. It’s unfortunate because that’s a nice piece of memorabilia,” Brady said Monday. “If it shows up on eBay somewhere, someone let me know so I can track that down.”
Asked if he planned to give the jersey to his mother, Galynn, who has been battling an undisclosed illness, Brady said Monday: “Those are special ones to keep.
“What can you do? I’ll take a ring, and that’s good enough for me.”
The Houston Police Department hadn’t immediately returned an ESPN request for comment.
ESPN’s Mike Reiss contributed to this report.