Jonathon Cooper pleaded not guilty. His trial is set for late July, right as camp opens.
The Broncos edge rusher entered a not-guilty plea to the domestic-violence-enhanced charge from his June arrest. The trial date lands at the start of training camp, leaving his status unresolved into the season.
Jonathon Cooper pleaded not guilty to the criminal mischief charge with a domestic violence enhancer stemming from his early-June arrest, and a trial date has been set for late July. That timing puts the legal proceeding at the doorstep of training camp, leaving the Broncos edge rusher's situation unresolved heading into the season.
Where does the case stand?
At a not-guilty plea with a trial ahead. Cooper entered the plea to the domestic-violence-enhanced criminal mischief charge from his June arrest, which followed an altercation that also led to his girlfriend's arrest, with both parties' phones damaged. He was released on personal recognizance after the arrest. A late-July trial date is now set, which means the matter will be contested in court rather than resolved through an early plea agreement.
Why does the timing matter?
Because late July is when training camps open. A trial at that point forces the question of Cooper's availability into the start of the football calendar, when the Broncos are trying to prepare a defense that set a franchise record with 68 sacks in 2025. The overlap creates a logistical and roster complication on top of the legal one. A drawn-out proceeding could shadow the team's camp, and the outcome carries direct competitive stakes for a unit that leans on Cooper's eight-sack production.
What about the NFL?
The league can act independently of the courts. Under the personal conduct policy, the NFL is not required to wait for the criminal process to conclude before imposing discipline, and it conducts its own investigation. A not-guilty plea and a contested trial don't preclude league action, which could come in the form of a suspension or a spot on the commissioner's exempt list at any point. For now, Cooper has been participating in the offseason program, and the Broncos have said only that they're gathering information.
Players in this story
Sources
- ESPN: Broncos' Cooper pleads not guilty; trial set for late July
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