Outraged that National Football League player Ray Rice received only a two-game suspension for a domestic violence arrest, Maine Gov. Paul LePage pledged to boycott the league and called on its commissioner to take the issue seriously. In a scathing letter sent to Roger Goodell on Tuesday, the outspoken Republican governor said the punishment given to the Baltimore Ravens running back sends the message that it's OK ''for professional athletes to beat women, just for the sake of ratings.'' ''Taking thugs and wife-beaters off the field may be bad for business, but you are playing games with people's lives,'' said LePage, who was beaten by his father when he was young and has made domestic abuse prevention and awareness a priority of his administration. Rice was arrested after a Feb. 15 altercation in Atlantic City, New Jersey, in which he struck then-fiancee Janay Palmer, who is now his wife. He added: ''As a matter of fact, the team should have taken him out in the back shed and taken care of him.'' LePage told Goodell that if the league allows players to get away with domestic violence, it will send the message to young men that such behavior is acceptable, which ''tarnishes all players and gives the league a bad name.'' He urged Goodell to take a strong stand against domestic violence by donating to an organization that provides services to victims or works to end the crime.
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