Kansas City Chiefs
The murder case against former NFL first-round draft pick Darron Lee includes evidence that he used ChatGPT for advice on how to deal with an “unresponsive” person.
Via Madison Sims of Local3News.com, the family of the victim in the case, Gabriella Perpétuo, plans to pursue accountability from ChatGPT for facilitating those efforts.
“The defendant in this case engaged ChatGPT to cover up a crime,” attorney C. Mark Warren told Sims. “We feel like that it’s important that ChatGPT and all AI platforms have guardrails in place where they can engage, but not engage without consequences.”
There’s an inherent ready-fire-aim quality to AI, with millions of users essentially serving as the beta testers. Companies like OpenAI are using the real-time experiences of everyone using the product to fine-tune it.
That process will give rise to a wide range of problems. OpenAI already faces litigation alleging that ChatGPT served as a “suicide coach.” And there’s more than one such case.
As to Lee, if Perpétuo was unresponsive but still alive, Lee’s decision to use ChatGPT for advice on how to handle the situation — and ChatGPT’s willingness to comply with the prompt — may have squandered the last opportunity to save her.
Especially if the response from ChatGPT was anything other than, “Call 911 right now.”
When a life is lost, justice comes in various forms. Lee faces first-degree murder charges. The family has filed a $50 million wrongful-death lawsuit against him. ChatGPT and OpenAI may have liability, too.
The AI revolution will give rise to plenty of legal questions. The responsibility of such companies to program their products to act properly in such situations will be determined either through regulation or litigation.
For most new industries, there’s a Wild West phase that plays out before the legislative and/or regulatory components of state and/or federal government can catch up. That’s where the civil justice system becomes critical to the creation of clear standards through the application of settled principles (primarily, negligence) aimed at forcing these companies to treat those who use their products with an adequate amount of care and respect.
Chiefs Clips
The Chiefs have a new tight end on the roster.
Wednesday’s transaction report from the league shows that they have signed Mason Pline. The Chiefs had an open spot after trading tackle Wanya Morris to the Falcons, so they did not need to make any corresponding move.
Pline tried out for the Chiefs at their minicamp this month. He signed with the 49ers after going undrafted in 2024 and spent the season on their practice squad. He moved on to the Saints as a waiver claim last August, but did not play in any games with New Orleans.
Travis Kelce, Noah Gray, and Jared Wiley are the returning tight ends from the Chiefs’ 2025 roster.
Chiefs receiver Rashee Rice has been released from jail in Texas.
He was serving a 30-day sentence for violating his probation, having tested positive for THC.
Video from KDFW shows Rice checking out of the Dallas County Jail before jogging through the door to exit the building, avoiding reporters’ questions as they ran after him. He went directly to a black SUV, which drove him away.
Rice recently underwent knee surgery, though he was allowed to do some rehab work while he was in jail.
Chiefs head coach Andy Reid told reporters last week that he thinks Rice will be ready for training camp in July. The wideout is set to return to Kansas City to continue his rehab, Reid said.
After missing the Chiefs’ OTAs and mandatory minicamp, receiver Rashee Rice soon will be free.
Via KCUR, Rice is scheduled to be released from jail on Tuesday, June 16.
Last month, Rice was required to serve 30 days immediately, after testing positive for THC. He had been sentenced to 30 days to be served at his discretion over the five-year term of his probation following the resolution of charges arising from a March 2024 street-racing incident. He pleaded guilty last year to two felonies.
Per the report, Rice ultimately was permitted to exit the facility to rehab a knee on which he had surgery shortly before his incarceration. The court order allowing it was entered on May 28.
Rice also was moved from an “isolated cell” to general population, at his lawyer’s request.
The league has shown no inclination to impose further punishment on Rice for his probation violation. He was suspended for the first six games of the 2025 season, due to his guilty plea.
The Chiefs have shared their plans for this summer’s training camp.
Camp will be held at Missouri Western State University in Saint Joseph’s, Missouri for the 16th time. The team will open camp on July 24 and they will hold their first practice open to fans on July 29.
That practice will be exclusively for season ticket holders and they will have another session just for season ticket holders on August 11. The team will open practice to all fans on July 30-31, August 1, August 3-7, August 10, August 12-13, and August 17-20. There will be autograph opportunities at all of those practice sessions.
The Chiefs will play their first preseason game against the Rams at home on August 15. They’ll be in Tampa on August 22 and they’ll close out their preseason schedule by hosting the Seahawks on August 28.
The Chiefs made a big offseason move to sign running back Kenneth Walker, the reigning Super Bowl MVP, away from the Seahawks. Coach Andy Reid and quarterback Patrick Mahomes think Walker is going to prove worth every penny of his three-year, $43 million contract.
Reid said after watching Walker during the offseason program that the way he approaches practice is exactly what the Chiefs were hoping for.
“He’s got a ton of energy, and you can tell he loves to play the game [and] wants to learn what we’re doing here,” Reid said, via ESPN. “He gets that it takes work to be good, and he’s willing to do that. Stronger than an ox. I mean, he’s put together.”
Mahomes and other offensive players have commented that Walker is eager to involve himself in every aspect of the Chiefs’ offense.
“You can tell he truly cares about football, he cares about his teammates,” Mahomes said. “If he’s not in the play, he’s helping the guys on the sideline and he’s trying to learn and [is] asking me questions.”
The Chiefs made a big investment in Walker, and it’s going to take a lot more than unpadded practices in the spring for that investment to pay off. But Reid and Mahomes think he’s off to a strong start.
The new Patrick Mahomes contract covers eight seasons and averages, from signing, a payout of $63.093 million per year. That pushes the market to unprecedented heights. And it brings into focus the next wave of quarterback deals.
So let’s take a look at the quarterbacks who’ll use the Mahomes contract as a key data point for ongoing or upcoming negotiations.
Lamar Jackson, Ravens.
Jackson has wanted a new deal for more than a year. His current contract averaged $52.5 million per year from signing. At the time it was finalized, he was the highest paid player in the league. He has now slid down to the bottom of the top 10. Mahomes getting to $63.09 million, especially while still recovering from a torn ACL, will only strengthen Lamar’s resolve.
Jackson currently has $104 million remaining on his current contract, over the next two years. With a no-tag clause, he can kick the can through the next two seasons and become an unrestricted free agent. It gives him significant leverage, and Mahomes’s contract likely nudges Lamar’s reasonable expectations from at least $60.1 million per year (based on Dak Prescott’s latest deal) to at least $63.1 million annually.
Joe Burrow, Bengals.
In 2023, after his first three NFL seasons, Burrow agreed to a seven-year deal with an average from signing of $44.28 million per year and a new-money average of $55 million. He has four years left with a total payout of $163.539 million, an average of $40.88 million.
His recent restructuring was a cap-creation device, with no new money. The Bengals, who are extremely careful with money, may not be inclined to tear up the current deal and replace it with a new contract.
For his part, Burrow may not be inclined to extend his commitment to the team. His discontent after three straight non-playoff seasons has become more obvious. As he enters his seventh season in Cincinnati, Burrow could be thinking about reaching the same conclusion Carson Palmer did after his eighth.
Baker Mayfield, Buccaneers.
He has said talks on a deal that would extend his $33.3 million per year contract are nowhere close to where he thought they’d be. The Buccaneers could tag him in 2027, or they could let him hit the open market.
Some think the Bucs wouldn’t use the franchise tag; with a 2026 cap number of $39.975 million, Mayfield’s 2027 franchise tender would be at least $47.97 million. There’s a sense in some circles that the Bucs believe they’ll ultimately offer him more than anyone would in free agency, if a new deal isn’t done before Mayfield’s self-imposed deadline of the start of training camp.
C.J. Stroud.
The Texans repeatedly have proclaimed that he’s their guy. But they have yet to do for him what they’d done for cornerback Derek Stingley Jr. and defensive end Will Anderson — sign the first-round pick to a new deal before his fourth season.
The challenge at this point comes from putting a number on his second contract. There’s a broad range when it comes to veteran quarterback pay. Where would Stroud fit?
Currently, the number would be lower than it could be for Stroud, if he has a strong fourth season. Since the Texans realize that, at this point, they’d be only bidding against themselves, there’s no reason to rush the process.
Caleb Williams, Bears.
The first overall pick in the 2024 draft becomes eligible for a new deal after the 2026 regular season. And Williams has been very focused on the business realities of the NFL, from even before he was drafted.
When the time comes for Williams to get a new deal, the Mahomes number will drive the discussion. Especially if Williams continues to be on a trajectory that could put him among the top four or five quarterbacks in football.
We’ve already heard talk of Williams having expectations that would be more than eye-popping. And we also expect that Williams will make it known that he wants his contract not after the 2026 postseason ends, but promptly upon the opening of the window for a new deal after the Bears face the Vikings in Week 18.
Why carry the injury risk into the 2026 postseason? No quarterback on his rookie deal has tried to do that, even though the CBA wrinkle has been hiding in plain sight since 2011.
Jayden Daniels, Commanders.
Like Williams, Daniels becomes eligible for a new deal after the 2026 regular season. His main goal should be to reestablish himself after a disappointing and injury-plagued second season, during which he played only seven of 17 games.
If Daniels returns to his rookie form, he’ll be joining Williams as a quarterback looking for a second contract.
Drake Maye, Patriots.
The player who finished second in the MVP voting to cap his second season also has his window open after the 2026 regular season. And the Patriots will be hoping that, like Tom Brady before him, Maye will be less inclined to break the bank and more inclined to ensure that there will be cap space to have a quality team around him.
Brady, who entered the league as the 199th overall pick, had naturally lower expectations early in his career. Maye, the third overall pick who was denied the commensurate reward due to the rookie wage scale, may not be as charitable as Brady was.
Bo Nix, Broncos.
Nix’s window likewise opens after the 2026 regular season. He’ll need to show he has fully recovered from the foot injury suffered late in the AFC playoff win over the Bills. And he’ll need to do even more in Sean Payton’s offense to unlock a major deal.
Regardless, there’s a new high bar — and his contemporaries from the 2024 draft could add more data points.
That raises another question, as to Williams, Daniels, Maye, and Nix. Who goes first? There will be a competition among the agents to emerge with the best deal. This could prompt some of them to wait until the others jump in the pool first.
Sam Darnold, Seahawks.
Darnold’s three-year, $100.5 million contract from 2025 was structured to give the Seahawks an escape hatch after one year. It wasn’t structured to force the team back to the table if Darnold leads the team to a Super Bowl win.
With $27.5 million in base pay and up to $5 million in available incentives, Darnold would be justified to seek a new deal. The Seahawks may want to wait until 2027.
Regardless, Mahomes’s new contract will be a factor, whenever it’s time to sit down and work out a new contract.
The wedding of Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce and a random, no-name Knicks fan is coming. Kelce’s boss isn’t talking about the upcoming ceremony involving Kelce and megastar Taylor Swift.
Chiefs coach Andy Reid was asked by reporters this week whether he’ll be attending the ceremony.
“Can’t talk about it, can’t talk about it,” Reid said with a laugh, via Nate Taylor of ESPN. “Listen, [Kelce’s] been here most of the offseason, if not the whole offseason. He did the mandatory camp and did a nice job there, so it’s good to have him back in and rolling. He’s very excited.”
As far as Reid can tell, the nuptials are a non-issue.
“You see no distractions with that and the wedding,” Reid said. “If it’s like when I got married, my wife did everything. I just kind of followed her lead on it [and] showed up. Maybe he’s doing more, but he looks like he’s pretty focused in on this job here, too.”
Reports have emerged in recent days that the wedding will happen in New York City — possibly at Madison Square Garden.
Which means that Taylor Swift’s presence at Game 4 of the Spurs-Knicks series wasn’t just about taking in a basketball game for the ages. She was also checking out the venue.
Xavier Worthy ran the fastest 40-yard dash in Scouting Combine history before the Chiefs took him in the first round of the 2024 NFL draft, so when asked about competing with the Chiefs’ other wide receivers on the practice field, Worthy said he knows he’ll always stand out.
“No question I’m the fastest,” Worthy said.
But last year Worthy’s production took a step backward as he played through a Week One shoulder injury, and he said this week that the surgery he had in January is going to be good for him in the long run, because in recovery he focused more on his strength and the mental part of his game, and not just relying on his speed.
“With the shoulder injury, I had that surgery in January, really it was just building on, getting stronger, getting back in the flow,” Worthy said. “It might have been the best thing for me, learning how to be a pro, learning how to approach the mental aspect and just getting your body prepared for certain things.”
Worthy said his injury-plagued 2025 season didn’t show what he can really be as an NFL receiver.
“I’d definitely say that’s not a true indication of what I am,” he said. “I was limited in certain things. I want to come back out here and show my ability and what I can do.”
In 2026, Worthy believes he’s going to demonstrate why the Chiefs were smart to draft him.
“I know the kind of player I can be,” Worthy said. “The things I can do on the field, what I can bring to the team.”
Chiefs coach Andy Reid has been known to eat a cheeseburger or two. But as Chiefs left tackle Josh Simmons talks about bulking up for this season, Reid doesn’t want him doing it with cheeseburgers.
Simmons told reporters this week that he weighs 285-290 pounds right now, and although he appears to be in great shape, he looks awfully lean by NFL offensive lineman standards. Simmons said he’s going to try to get up to 300 pounds by training camp, and Reid wants him doing it the right way.
“You don’t want cheeseburger weight,” Reid said. “He’s extremely athletic, and he’s gifted that way, so he’s able to get away with some things because of that.”
The things Simmons gets away with include blocking 300-pound men without weighing 300 pounds himself, and Reid said he’s not sure that Simmons even needs to get up to 300 pounds to do his job effectively.
“He’s kind of a unique character because he’s not a real big guy,” Reid said. “But he’s extremely strong and very athletic, so you always talk about leverage as a coach, and he does a good job with that, and he was able to function that way last year. He probably told you he’s going to put on weight, we’ll see. I don’t think that’s an absolute that has to take place. He looked pretty good out here.”
The 6-foot-5 Simmons weighed 317 pounds at last year’s Scouting Combine before the Chiefs drafted him in the first round. He’s lost significant weight since then, and he might be the lightest offensive tackle in the entire NFL right now: At 285 pounds he’d be lighter than every single offensive tackle who played in the league last year, according to pro-football-reference.com.
Simmons showed promise in his rookie year, but he missed nine games last season. The most important thing for the Chiefs is that he’s healthy and ready to protect Patrick Mahomes’ blind side, and they don’t think he needs to add any cheeseburger weight to do that.