Jimmy Higgins
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WASHINGTON DC -- Speaker of the House John Boehner announced in front of a gaggle of press reporters that the House would be launching a committee to investigate any potential ties the Obama Administration may have had with the late and fateful decision by Seattle Seahawk Head Coach Pete Carroll's to run a short slant pass instead of handing off the ball to their seemingly unstoppable running back Lynch.
"This has nothing to do with politics," stated the Speaker of the House. "We want to get to the truth about what the Obama Administration knew and when they knew it."
The passing play which was chosen in lieu of a running play to Lynch ended up in the hands of the opposing team's player Malcolm Butler. The interception virtually killed any chance Seattle had of winning the Super Bowl. The play selection was immediately criticized by Cris Collinsworth, a sports commentator broadcasting the Super Bowl for NBC.
"I can't believe it," noted Collinsworth. While Collinsworth did not say anything that could potentially connect the play call to President Obama, Republican members in the House of Representatives were quick to question a potential link.
"It was the first thing that came to my mind," noted California Representative Darryl Issa. "The inefficiency, the lack of experience. The second they hiked the football I knew it was going to be an interception and it just made me question what possible role could Obama have had with it."
Former Congressman Colonel Allen West tweeted immediately after the play "What did Obama know about that?!"
The Obama Administration has not commented on this latest investigation. It comes on the heels of two other investigations that the House has just launched, one to investigate the Obama Admin's link to war crimes committed during the Second Boer War and the why spoons appear to bend when you place them in a glass of water, but come out normal when to pull them back out.
"This has nothing to do with politics," stated the Speaker of the House. "We want to get to the truth about what the Obama Administration knew and when they knew it."
The passing play which was chosen in lieu of a running play to Lynch ended up in the hands of the opposing team's player Malcolm Butler. The interception virtually killed any chance Seattle had of winning the Super Bowl. The play selection was immediately criticized by Cris Collinsworth, a sports commentator broadcasting the Super Bowl for NBC.
"I can't believe it," noted Collinsworth. While Collinsworth did not say anything that could potentially connect the play call to President Obama, Republican members in the House of Representatives were quick to question a potential link.
"It was the first thing that came to my mind," noted California Representative Darryl Issa. "The inefficiency, the lack of experience. The second they hiked the football I knew it was going to be an interception and it just made me question what possible role could Obama have had with it."
Former Congressman Colonel Allen West tweeted immediately after the play "What did Obama know about that?!"
The Obama Administration has not commented on this latest investigation. It comes on the heels of two other investigations that the House has just launched, one to investigate the Obama Admin's link to war crimes committed during the Second Boer War and the why spoons appear to bend when you place them in a glass of water, but come out normal when to pull them back out.