Just 12 Hours After Bears Stadium Project Halted Amid Scandal, CEO Kevin Warren Speaks Out Taking Full Responsibility — Sends 10-Word Message to Bears Community and Vows to Fix All Damage
Chicago, Illinois – December 18, 2025
Less than 12 hours after the Chicago Bears’ proposed new stadium project was forced into a halt amid a document-leak scandal, CEO Kevin Warren stepped before the media to accept personal responsibility and deliver a brief but weighty message to the Bears community. The swift response came as Halas Hall continued to reel from the off-field fallout that has shaken the organization.
According to multiple sources, the pause in the project followed the release of internal materials tied to timelines, financial structures, and governance processes, raising serious concerns about transparency. Team owner George McCaskey ordered a comprehensive review. Warren, for his part, chose to confront the crisis head-on — a move widely viewed as necessary at a moment when fan trust has been stretched to its limits.
Speaking publicly, Warren avoided deflection or excuses. Instead, he issued a statement of exactly 10 words, widely seen as his first direct apology since the scandal surfaced:
“We failed you, we rebuild trust and make this right.”
The message spread quickly throughout the Bears community. For many fans, its impact wasn’t in the word count, but in the acknowledgment of fault and the emphasis on restoring trust — a foundational value for a franchise defined by tradition and legacy.
Following the statement, Warren pledged to repair all damage, including cooperating with independent reviews, auditing internal processes, and rebuilding the project’s roadmap under stricter transparency standards. He also stressed that every future step would be taken under close oversight from team leadership and ownership.
Amid the developments, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell offered remarks that carried clear weight and implied pressure — a message many interpreted as a subtle warning from the league:
“The NFL is built on accountability, and when that accountability is questioned, we will not look away,” Goodell said. “Moments like this demand clarity from those at the top — and for Kevin Warren, how he confronts this moment will say a great deal. This isn’t just about addressing a problem, but about whether an organization chooses to protect trust… or lose it.”
The timing of Warren’s response was deliberate. The Bears are showing signs of on-field revival, and leadership is determined not to let behind-the-scenes turmoil derail that momentum. For fans across Chicago, the central question now extends beyond blame — it is whether trust can truly be rebuilt.
The road ahead for the stadium project remains uncertain. But within 12 hours of the scandal breaking, the Bears sent a clear signal: responsibility has been acknowledged, league scrutiny is real — and what the organization does next will define everything.
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