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Michael Vick is worried, Brett Favre is “inviolable” in the welfare scandal of Mississippi: “The system is manipulated”

The ex-NFL quarters back Michael Vick has confronted his career in various legal disputes, and now he speaks against the retired fellow human beings All-Pro Brett Favre, which is accused of having abused millions of social houses by the Mississippi Department of Human Services.

Vick, now the coach in the Norfolk State, says that some former athletes in the public spotlight gives a double standards.

“People go to prison to steal money every day,” said Vick in Netflix '”Untold: The Fall of Favre”, which was first transcribed by the “People” magazine. “When it is so important, the right institutions can get involved. But some people are untouchable in a certain way and so it is exactly the same.

Favre, who was not charged, denied allegations that he has wasted more than $ 20 million from the temporary support for needy families anti-pover program. According to Mississippi, Favre and the former governor of Mississippi, Phil Bryant, used at least 5 million dollars of the state's welfare funds to build a new volleyball stadium in Southern.

Favre played college football in Southern Miss, and his daughter was an athlete during the alleged monetary function.

Vick served 21 months in a federal prison for his participation in a dog strain ring in his 2007 season at the Atlanta Falcons. He now uses his opportunity as a coach at FCS level to help others learn from mistakes that he has left the field as a professional athlete.

“There were many people who watched, many young men watched,” said Vick during an interview with Johnny Manziel at the beginning of this year and decided to prison about Glory Daze. “For the right reasons it was made so public. Now it is also a spotlight to show how you do it right. My lawyer always told me: 'You can do the right things 23 hours a day and sink it up in the last hour and the whole day is ruined.' This is the stigma.

Vick has worked as a NFL analyst for Fox Sports in recent years before returning to the rust.

“I just got the call out of nowhere,” Vick previously said about the Norfolk state. “It was really abrupt. It was just that I could try it out and see if I like it. I can continue to try to drive and get up. We'll see what happens. I felt that it was a great opportunity to teach them on and outside the field and to share this football knowledge.

“I appreciate the heights of my career, but I think about the deep stalls and what I could have done more, especially in the back. In the back of 9 and 10, you think you know everything. Andy (Reid) always told me: 'There is more. I had the feeling that I should now take more roles and responsibility.

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