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News / Nation & World

Trump accused of foiling Bon Jovi NFL bid

By CAROLYN THOMPSON, Associated Press
Published: November 6, 2017, 6:06am
2 Photos
A Buffalo Bills fan displays a shirt and a sign in protest of Jon Bon Jovi’s interest in the Buffalo Bills, on Aug. 16, 2014 during an NFL preseason football game between the Bills and Pittsburgh Steelers in Pittsburgh. GQ magazine reported in October 2017 that Trump was behind a campaign that kept Bon Jovi from purchasing the Buffalo Bills NFL team in 2014.
A Buffalo Bills fan displays a shirt and a sign in protest of Jon Bon Jovi’s interest in the Buffalo Bills, on Aug. 16, 2014 during an NFL preseason football game between the Bills and Pittsburgh Steelers in Pittsburgh. GQ magazine reported in October 2017 that Trump was behind a campaign that kept Bon Jovi from purchasing the Buffalo Bills NFL team in 2014. (AP Photo/Don Wright, File) Photo Gallery

BUFFALO, N.Y. — Was Donald Trump the secret force behind the seemingly grassroots 2014 campaign to block Jon Bon Jovi from buying the NFL’s Buffalo Bills?

That’s what those involved are saying now, three years after the billionaire and the rocker were competing to buy the Bills. At the heart of the effort was the creation of a fan group called 12th Man Thunder that pushed to keep the team in Buffalo and exploited already rampant speculation Bon Jovi planned to move the franchise to Canada.

Among the group’s antics in the spring of 2014 were the collection of thousands of petition signatures and distribution of “Bon Jovi Free Zone” posters calling for a boycott of the band’s music in bars, shops and on radio stations. All of it received widespread media coverage, including from The Associated Press.

“At the time I wish I could have told people,” said Charles Pellien, one of the group’s leaders. “I just wanted to blurt out, ‘Donald Trump is behind this!'”

Neither the White House nor the Trump organization responded to requests for comment on the claim, which was first mentioned on a Buffalo-area radio show in March and reported last month by GQ magazine.

According to Michael Caputo, a public relations consultant who would go on to work on Trump’s presidential campaign, Trump came up with the idea for the group at a meeting in early 2014 as a way to tap into widespread fan anxiety at the time over a potential Bills move to Canada.

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