A damning audit has accused five law firms representing nearly 100 former NFL players of orchestrating a scheme to fraudulently extract more than $87 million from the league’s landmark concussion settlement fund, raising serious questions about the integrity of a program designed to protect the health of retired athletes.
The audit, conducted by Special Masters David Hoffman and Jo-Ann Verrier, judicial officers appointed to resolve disputes within the settlement, identifies the firms as working alongside a small group of doctors to secure improper Parkinson’s disease diagnoses for players seeking compensation. The 51-page filing, made public Monday, lays out in detail how the alleged scheme exploited gaps in the fund’s medical review process.
How the alleged scheme worked
According to the audit, players were given diagnoses of Parkinson’s disease by outside physicians not affiliated with the settlement fund. Before those same players were then examined by fund-approved doctors, they were reportedly prescribed powerful medications capable of suppressing the visible symptoms of the disease. When fund-affiliated physicians encountered patients who appeared well but arrived carrying outside diagnoses and active prescriptions, they deferred to the paperwork rather than the physical presentation in front of them.
The Special Masters were direct in their assessment, concluding that fund-approved doctors, faced with patients who showed no outward symptoms but came armed with prior documentation, effectively accepted those outside records at face value. The result, according to the audit, was a pattern of approvals that may have cost the settlement fund tens of millions of dollars.
The decision is careful to note that it does not conclude that any diagnosed player is free of Parkinson’s disease. Its focus is squarely on the process by which attorneys advanced their clients’ claims, not on the medical conditions of the players themselves.
Firms named and remedies ordered
The law firms named in the audit include Douglas Grossinger, Feder Law LLC, Pro Athlete Law Firm PA, Syme Law PLLC, and Reppert Oates and Vytell LLC. None of the named firms or lawyers offered substantive responses when approached for comment.
The Special Masters called for the denial of all pending claims from former players represented by the named attorneys or evaluated by the eight doctors identified in the report. They also recommended a full restructuring of the diagnostic process used to assess Parkinson’s disease claims going forward. The audit further noted that the Special Masters retain the authority to refer their findings to federal law enforcement, though no such referral has been announced.
The NFL, which has paid out more than $1.5 billion from the uncapped fund since the settlement was established, described the outcome as a necessary step toward protecting the program’s integrity. A league spokesperson expressed hope that the decision would serve as a deterrent against future misconduct.
A fund with a troubled history
The concussion settlement itself grew out of a lawsuit brought by former players who alleged the NFL failed to adequately address the long-term neurological dangers of head trauma. Since its creation, the fund has drawn persistent criticism from retired players and their advocates, who have described the claims process as slow, narrow, and difficult to navigate.
In 2021, the league agreed to eliminate the use of race-adjusted cognitive testing standards that critics argued made it harder for Black players to qualify for dementia-related compensation. That same year, a separate investigation led by Hoffman found that a Florida law firm had manipulated doctors and falsified medical records on behalf of players. The latest audit suggests that, despite prior scrutiny, the vulnerabilities in the system have not been fully closed.

