Vikings placed defensive end Everson Griffen on the NFL's reserve/non-football illness list Friday, meaning he will be away from the team for at least three weeks. Griffen was taken to a mental health facility Wednesday afternoon, ending an impasse between him and police that started with a 911 call shortly after 3 a.m. from his home in Minnetrista.
Coach Mike Zimmer did not provide any update on Griffen's condition as of Friday afternoon or how the team will proceed with him this season.
"I don't have much of an update on him," Zimmer said before the Vikings' roster move was announced. "We've been so busy with everything."
Griffen missed five games in 2018 when he spent time away from the team receiving mental health treatment.
Early Wednesday morning, Griffen posted, then deleted, a video on Instagram saying people were trying to kill him as he held a gun in his hand. He told the dispatcher that he fired one round but nobody was wounded, police said; they added no intruder was found. According to police, Griffen refused to come out of the home until after 1:30 p.m., when he was transported by ambulance to an area health care facility.
General Manager Rick Spielman was outside Griffen's home on Wednesday with emergency responders and team mental health professionals, saying afterward that Griffen's next days and weeks were being charted by health care workers.
"They're working on that now," Spielman said early Wednesday evening. "The No. 1 step was, first of all, Everson and his family and to get the situation under control, and to get him transported to the necessary resources and professionals that he needs to be with."
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