NFL news: Bills GM defends Maxwell Hairson in the midst of the demand for sexual aggression


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The first round of Buffalo Bills, Maxwell Hairson, is dealing with a demand for sexual aggression while in its first training field, and its new NFL organization supports it while it crosses it.

Hairson was appointed in a civil lawsuit stating that he sexually assaulted a woman while at the University of Kentucky in 2021.

The general manager of Bills, Brandon Beane, went to the accusation on Wednesday, when he described the situation as “frustrating”, but not in the way one might think.

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Buffalo Bills Maxwell Hairson, #31, enters the field during training camp at St. John Fisher. (Images of Mark Konezny-Imagn)

“Frustrating because, in the legal world, you cannot sit there and say things from one place to another. You must let it go,” Beane told journalists, through the New York Post. “This happened to this young man more than four years ago. He resigned from his phone to demonstrate … He made a polygraph test. This child fled from anything, he replied all that.

“We have to remember in society that people can make accusations and do things. I have no idea what the agenda is there. I can tell you that, every stone that we turned around, every door we look back, this is a very good young man. A young man who would let your home enter, look at your children, hang out whoever it is.”

Josh Allen decided not to let the ‘hard blows’ cameras become distractions for invoices in the training camp

Beane continued to emphasize the type of person that he and the Bills believe that Hairson is.

“He is really a good person … I think we must remember in the world, I will not get into that, but we see these accusations, sometimes these guys can also be victims,” Beane explained. “They earn a lot of money. People rarely defend them. That is difficult for me in this seat sometimes. Because I have seen it. We have had it here with a player here a few years ago that he is no longer here that he is mistakenly accused.”

Rebecca Hendryx is the woman who was identified as Hairson’s accuser in the lawsuit, which was presented in Kentucky earlier this month, according to ESPN.

Buffalo Bills Maxwell Hairson corner, #31, works during the mini -family at the Highmark Stadium. (Gregory Fisher-Imagn images)

Hendryx states that Hairson “took his clothes and sexually assaulted it even though he supposedly told him that he did not want to participate in sexual activities.

Hairson said Wednesday that he went through an “exhaustive” investigation after the police learned of the accusations while he was in college. He was 17 years old at the time of accusations.

“The University of Kentucky conducted an exhaustive investigation,” said Hairson, who does not face criminal charges, through the New York Post. “I was also exonerated from that. And I offered as a volunteer to make multiple polygraphs because I was determined to get my truth, because I had nothing to hide. It was an open book.

“I have two sisters that I love a lot, and I respect all women, and I was determined to get my truth. As I said, it was an open book, and I was exempted from both and I only had to stay strong. But I’m sure my truth will be out there.”

Buffalo Bills Maxwell Hairson, #31, jogs another area of the field during voluntary training in its practice installation on May 27, 2025. (IMAGN)

Buffalo needed secondary help in this low season, and used the 30th general selection of Hairson, who went viral during the NFL draft after the cameras asked him excitedly by all the players who were selected before him in Green Bay.

Hairson is expected to be a headline with Christian Benford, although Dane Jackson and Tre’Davious White, who met Bills for a second period with the team, will also fight for work.

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