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Family Sues Youth Football League for Untreated Traumatic Brain Injury That Led to Death

Family Sues Youth Football League for Untreated Traumatic Brain Injury Causing CTE, and Suicide

Family Sues Youth Football LeagueA Family Sues Youth Football League Pop Warner, a youth football league, after learning that their son had CTE – chronic traumatic encephalopathy – a degenerative brain disease caused by untreated traumatic brain injury, and which can lead to depression and suicide.

Joseph Chernach killed himself at age 25, in 2012. Chernach played youth football through Pop Warner for years of his childhood, which his family now claims in a lawsuit, filed on Thursday, February 5th, was the cause of his depression, because repeated, untreated traumatic brain injury, then chronic traumatic encephalopathy.

The Chernach family seeks at least $5 million in damages from Pop Warner, which they say in their lawsuit filing “knew or should have known that tackle football was dangerous for children and exposed children to head injuries, including dementia pugilistica,” which is a variant of CTE.

The complaint continued by stating that Pop Warner negligently failed to properly train its coaches, did not use the safest possible helmets, did not teach players to properly wear their helmets, and did not limit the amount of hitting in practice. The youth football league also failed to follow correct concussion and traumatic brain injury protocol according to new information gathered and published by medical professionals as early as 1997.

“It [CTE and TBI] affects behavioral and mood issues first,” said Chernach’s mother’s attorney. “You are going to see the depression, you’re going to see the paranoia, you’re going to see difficult decision making, impulsive behaviors, spiraling down into something like a suicide, which is what happened here.”

The lawsuit further states that Chernach appeared to be doing well for a short time after he stopped playing Pop Warner football. His freshman year at Central Michigan University was marked by good grades. However, his family stated that his sophomore year, Chernach’s personality began to change.

“From that point on his mood became progressively depressed and ultimately paranoid, distrusting his closes friends and family. … Joseph Chernach’s suicide was the ‘natural and probable consequence’ of the brain damage he suffered playing football.”

“There really is only one thing that could cause CTE in a young person as this and that is repetitive head trauma,” the family’s attorney continued. “The only repetitive head trauma Joseph Chernach had was from playing football.”

A recent study investigating rates of traumatic brain injury and CTE in deceased professional football players showed that around 80% of the brains examined had signs of repeated, untreated traumatic brain injury.

A lawsuit filed against the NFL for its negligence regarding player safety to prevent traumatic brain injury landed the former and current football players with millions of dollars to help with lifelong physical and emotional injury, and has also forced the NFL to change many of its policies regarding how long players play and how league-hired doctors handle concussions on the field.

The Concussion and Traumatic Brain Injury Attorneys at the Strom Law Firm

If you or a loved one has suffered a traumatic brain injury due to a concussion after an automobile accident or injury from a defective product, it is not too late to get help. The attorneys at the Strom Law Firm offer free consultations to discuss the incident that led to traumatic brain injury and determine if you have a personal injury case. Contact us today. 803.252.4800.

Family Sues Youth Football League

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