CityHouse Ashburn Station, a 200-unit luxury townhome community in Loudoun County, has sold for $120 million.
New York-based Rithm Capital, McLean-based American Real Estate Partners and New Jersey-based GreenBarn Investment Group closed the purchase from Dream Finders Homes on Monday.
AREP and GreenBarn are co-general partners for the project. Rithm is providing equity capital, in part through its partnership with GreenBarn, and providing debt financing through its Genesis subsidiary.
Phase one of CityHouse Ashburn Station will be available to rent in mid-August. The team will deliver the remaining phases over the next 15 months.
“With this acquisition, our partnership is taking an opportunistic investment approach to redefine and elevate the [build-to-rent] sector, one that encapsulates AREP’s signature strategy of creating truly unique properties in vibrant and emerging locations and our agility to invest in high-impact niches of the real estate market,” Brian Katz, AREP co-founder and president, said in a statement.
CityHouse Ashburn Station is located near the Silver Line’s Ashburn Station Metro stop. Unit sizes will average 2,000 square feet and offer attached garages, large island kitchens, full-size side-by-side washer and dryers and smart home functionality with resident amenities including sports courts, communal outdoor green spaces, pet-friendly facilities and indoor/outdoor entertainment areas.
NBA legend Magic Johnson, one of the Ashburn-based NFL team’s new co-owners, wouldn’t rule out the possibility during an interview Friday morning with Craig Melvin on NBC’s “Today” show.
“Everything is on the table, right? Especially after the last year,” the former Los Angeles Lakers star point guard said. “We will see [where] we are with the name. But I can’t say that right now.” Later in the interview, he added, “The name of the team will come up eventually.”
Asked about whether the team, which has its headquarters in Loudoun County and plays home games at FedEx Field in Landover, Maryland, could relocate to Washington, D.C., Johnson declined to answer, saying, “We’re going to spend this year understanding what we have in place.”
Amid controversy with past team owner Dan Snyder, Virginia’s General Assembly tabled a 2022 incentive bill aimed at helping the Commanders build a new stadium and headquarters in Woodbridge. Virginia lawmakers are said to be open to working with the team’s new owners to bring the Commanders stadium to the commonwealth after the team’s FedEx Field lease runs out in 2027.
Johnson is a partner in a team of investors led by Maryland billionaire Josh Harris that purchased the Commanders for a record $6.05 billion from Snyder, after NFL owners unanimously approved the deal Thursday. Harris is now managing partner and majority owner of the Commanders, the NBA’s Philadelphia 76ers and the NHL’s New Jersey Devils through his company Harris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment LLC (HBSE).
During the “Today” interview, Johnson also commented on how the new management would differ from Snyder, who received a $60 million fine from the NFL Thursday following a league investigation into allegations of sexual harassment, a toxic workplace culture and deliberate underreporting of revenue.
“First of all,” Johnson said, “you have to let the employees know that you respect them and that it will be a safe place to work, and we want you to have a winning attitude too. … If we respect them, they will respect us and go to the wall for us.”
Dan Snyder’s controversial 24-year tenure as the embattled owner of the Ashburn-based Washington Commanders has come to an end with the record $6.05 billion sale of the team — and a $60 million fine from the NFL.
In a special meeting Thursday, all 32 NFL team owners unanimously approved the team’s sale to a partnership led by Maryland billionaire and Philadelphia 76ers owner Josh Harris for the highest price ever paid for any North American sports franchise. Simultaneously, the league imposed the hefty fine on Snyder, the team’s owner since 1999, over a sexual harassment allegation by an employee and for underreporting revenue.
The sale, which may be finalized as soon as Friday, required the approval of the NFL’s finance committee and three-fourths of the league’s team owners. NFL owners were expected to vote on the sale during their May meeting in Minnesota but delayed the decision until the special meeting Thursday due to the deal’s complexity. (According to ESPN, in order to meet NFL guidelines for the sale, Harris had to restructure his offer to reduce his debt in the deal to no more than $1.1 billion, while upping his personal equity to at least 30% of the purchase price.)
Harris, who is also managing partner and majority owner of the NBA’s 76ers and the NHL’s New Jersey Devils, co-founded private equity company Apollo Global Management. He and a partnership including NBA legend Magic Johnson and billionaire Danaher Corp. co-founder Mitchell Rales reached an agreement with Snyder in May for the sale of the Commanders.
Late Thursday afternoon, the team posted a message from “future Commanders Managing Partner Josh Harris” on its Twitter account: “Today my partners and I were entrusted by the NFL with the stewardship of a great franchise. As a lifelong Washington football fan who grew up here, I know that the Commanders are more than just a sports team. This is an institution, passed down from generation to generation.
“From day one, it is our top priority to deliver you a championship caliber team, and we will strive every day to ensure that we are a franchise that you can be proud of. To Commanders fans everywhere, our promise is simple: We will do the work, create the culture and make the investment needed to deliver for this team and for Washington.”
Leading up to the sale, Snyder and the team’s head office have been under scrutiny for years by the NFL, Congress and national media amid widespread reports of alleged sexual harassment and fostering a hostile work environment. As the sale’s approval was announced Thursday, the NFL released the results of an investigation into Snyder and the Commanders by former U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White, who sustained a report of sexual harassment of a female employee by Snyder as well as allegations that the team deliberately underreported the franchise’s NFL revenues. The NFL imposed the $60 million fine as a resolution to the matters.
“The conduct substantiated in Ms. White’s findings has no place in the NFL. We strive for workplaces that are safe, respectful and professional,” NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said in a statement Thursday.
Goodell also congratulated Harris and “his impressive group of partners,” saying, “Josh will be a great addition to the NFL. He has a remarkable record in business, sports, and in his communities. The diverse group that Josh has put together is outstanding for its business acumen and strong Washington ties and we welcome them to the NFL as well.”
Thursday afternoon following the sale’s approval, Magic Johnson tweeted, “This is truly the biggest achievement in my business career and a historic moment for the entire Black community. Talk about God’s perfect timing. This was the right organization for me to be a part of given it’s global appeal, history of winning, and the diverse fanbase and DMV community. I have a special relationship with the DMV. Many people don’t know I’ve done business in the Washington, DC area for many years. I was one of the owners of the Washington Hilton, I built multiple Starbucks franchises and Magic Johnson Theaters, and empowerment centers with the Magic Johnson Foundation. I also have my company SodexoMAGIC headquartered here. The DMV community has embraced and supported me, and I am honored and ecstatic to be a co-owner of the Commanders franchise!”
Harris and Rales’s investment group made a failed bid to buy the Denver Broncos last year. The Broncos instead went to Walmart heir Rob Walton for $4.65 billion, setting what was then a sales record for an NFL sports team. Harris also previously held an ownership stake of less than 5% in the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Snyder’s tenure in charge of Washington team began in 1999 when he purchased it from the estate of Jack Kent Cooke, who first purchased a stake in the team in 1961 and became its majority owner in 1974. During Cooke’s ownership, the team won three Super Bowls in 1982, 1987 and 1991 under Head Coach Joe Gibbs.
A lifelong entrepreneur from Maryland, Snyder co-founded a wallboard advertising company in 1989 with his sister, Michele Snyder, that became Snyder Communications LP. In 2000, Snyder sold the business, which employed 12,000 people, for more than $2 billion.
When Snyder first purchased the Ashburn-based team, it was known as the Washington Redskins, a name criticized for decades as racist and derogatory against Native Americans. The name and logo were retired in 2020 amid a summer of national racial protests and following pressure from corporate sponsors. The team changed its name to the temporary generic moniker of the Washington Football Team before settling on the Commanders.
Snyder’s wife, Tanya, took over as co-CEO of the team in 2021, after the NFL’s $10 million fine of the team for an “improper” and “highly unprofessional” workplace culture. A few months earlier, in March 2021, the Snyders bought out the team’s minority co-owners to become its sole owners. Reports at the time placed the team’s value at $3.5 billion.
By November 2022, with controversies, investigations and negative press mounting, Dan and Tanya Snyder hired Bank of America Securities to consider potential sales of the team. And in April, the Snyders reached a tentative agreement to sell to Harris’ group, the same month that the Commanders settled a lawsuit with the Washington, D.C., attorney general’s office over the team’s practices in handling season ticket deposit funds from fans.
Washington Commanders owner Dan Snyder has reached an agreement for the reported $6 billion sale of the Ashburn-based NFL team to a group led by Bethesda, Maryland-based billionaire Josh Harris.
News of the sale was posted on the team’s website and on Twitter Friday afternoon.
“We are very pleased to have reached an agreement for the sale of the Commanders franchise with Josh Harris, an area native, and his impressive group of partners,” Dan and Tanya Snyder said in a statement. “We look forward to the prompt completion of this transaction and to rooting for Josh and the team in the coming years.”
Harris co-founded Apollo Global Management and owns the NHL’s New Jersey Devils. He and a group including NBA legend Earvin “Magic” Johnson and Danaher Corp. co-founder Mitchell Rales reached an agreement April 13 for a record-breaking $6 billion sale of the team. Actual terms of the sale were not immediately released Friday afternoon.
Shortly before the team posted the statement to its own account, Johnson tweeted about his own excitement regarding the deal.
“I could not be more excited to be a partner in the proposed new ownership group for the Washington Commanders,” Johnson said in his tweet. “Josh Harris has assembled an amazing group who share a commitment to not only doing great things on the field but to making a real impact in the DMV community. I’m so excited to get to work on executing our vision for the Commanders and our loyal fanbase!”
Snyder, the team’s owner since 1999, and the team’s head office have come under scrutiny by the NFL and Congress for alleged sexual harassment and fostering a hostile work environment. His wife, Tanya, took over as co-CEO of the team in 2021, after the NFL’s $10 million fine of the team for an “improper” and “highly unprofessional” workplace culture. At the time, there seemed to be little appetite among team owners to force the Snyders to sell. According to NFL bylaws, it would take the agreement of 24 team owners to oust another owner.
But in November 2022, Dan and Tanya Snyder hired Bank of America Securities to consider potential sales, the Ashburn-based NFL team announced. Any sale would require approval of three-fourths of the 31 team owners. According to The New York Times, the Harris group must submit its proposal for approval to the NFL’s finance committee, followed by the entire group of owners, who are next set to meet May 22-23 in Minneapolis.
Harris and Rales’s investment group made a failed bid to buy the Denver Broncos last year. That team went to Walmart heir Rob Walton for $4.65 billion, setting a sales record for an NFL sports team.
Washington Commanders owner Dan Snyder has agreed to sell the Ashburn-based NFL team for a record-breaking $6 billion, according to several news reports Thursday. The buyers are a group of investors that includes NBA legend Magic Johnson and is led by two Maryland billionaires, Apollo Global Management co-founder Josh Harris and Danaher Corp. co-founder Mitchell Rales.
Sportico, a sports business website, broke the news Thursday afternoon, and The New York Times released a story about half an hour later reporting the purchase agreement, a record-setting amount for any professional sports franchise. In late March, ESPN reported two $6 billion offers for the Commanders, including Harris’ offer and a second bid by Canadian billionaire Steve Apostolopoulos.
The team’s reported buyers are a group led by Harris, who is based in Bethesda, Maryland, and also owns the NHL’s New Jersey Devils, and Rales of Potomac, Maryland.
In recent days, The Washington Post and others reported that Amazon.com Inc. founder Jeff Bezos, who had previously indicated interest in the team, had decided not to make an offer.
Snyder, the team’s owner since 1999, and the team’s head office have come under scrutiny by the NFL and Congress for alleged sexual harassment and fostering a hostile work environment. His wife, Tanya, took over as co-CEO of the team in 2021, after the NFL’s $10 million fine of the team for an “improper” and “highly unprofessional” workplace culture. At the time, there seemed to be little appetite among team owners to force the Snyders to sell. According to NFL bylaws, it would take the agreement of 24 team owners to oust another owner.
In November 2022, Dan and Tanya Snyder hired Bank of America Securities to consider potential sales, the Ashburn-based NFL team announced. Any sale would require approval of three-fourths of the 31 team owners.
According to The New York Times, the Harris group must submit its proposal to the NFL’s finance committee, followed by the entire group of owners. That could take place in the next several weeks; the owners are set to meet May 22-23 in Minneapolis.
Harris, co-founder of Apollo Global Management and a Bethesda, Maryland, native, and Rales, a resident of Potomac, Maryland, who is a co-founder of Danaher Corp., are the major funders of the deal, according to reports. The same group, which includes former L.A. Laker Johnson as a limited partner, made a failed bid to buy the Denver Broncos last year. That team went to Walmart heir Rob Walton for $4.65 billion, setting a sales record for an NFL sports team.
Apostolopoulos, the other Commanders bidder, founded Six Ventures Inc., a private equity fund, and is managing partner of the Toronto-based real estate firm Triple Group of Cos. He was previously interested in purchasing the Charlotte Hornets team, ESPN reported.
Of particular interest to Virginians may be the prospect of a future stadium in the commonwealth. Although the General Assembly backed off a generous incentive package to lure the Commanders’ next stadium to Virginia while Snyder and his team were being investigated by Congress and the NFL, a new owner may change the equation. The team has a contract to continue playing at Landover, Maryland’s FedEx Field until the end of the 2026 season, but the team has been open about wanting to build a new stadium. Gov. Glenn Youngkin proposed $500,000 in state funding to study ways to encourage the team to build in Northern Virginia, funding that could be included in the state’s 2024 budget.
In December 2022, the House Committee on Oversight and Reform released a report finding that “sexual harassment, bullying and other toxic conduct” took place in the franchise’s operations, and that Dan Snyder attempted to intimidate witnesses in the congressional investigation. The NFL also launched a second probe of the team in February 2022, led by Mary Jo White, a former U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York and former chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Earlier this week, the L.A. Galaxy soccer team announced it had hired the Commanders’ chief creative and digital officer, Will Misselbrook, as its chief creative and content officer. He was tapped in May 2021 to lead the team’s rebrand after it dropped the name Redskins in favor of the Washington Football Team and later the Commanders.
The top five most-read daily news stories on VirginiaBusiness.com from Feb. 14 to March 13 included an update on the Lego Group’s Chesterfield County factory, which is expected to begin production in 2025.
The port has more than 20 cranes made by Chinese company ZPMC, with five more on order for next year. U.S. defense officials have voiced concerns about the cranes’ potential for espionage. (March 8)
Even as it prepares for the June opening of the first phase of its $2.5 billion East Coast headquarters in Arlington County, Amazon.com Inc. announced it was delaying the project’s second phase. (March 3)
Jennifer Aument, AECOM’s Arlington-based transportation chief executive, plans to step down from her job this spring, a decision she reached after surviving breast cancer. (Feb. 22)
ESPN reporter Adam Schefter reported Tuesday that a group of investors led by Josh Harris and Mitchell Rales and including NBA legend Magic Johnson has submitted a $6 billion bid for the Washington Commanders, meeting the asking price of team owner Dan Snyder. Later in the day, Schefter tweeted that Canadian billionaire Steve Apostolopoulos made a competing $6 billion bid for the team.
If successful, either $6 billion bid for the Commanders would set a record price for any sports franchise. Co-founder of Apollo Global Management and a Bethesda, Maryland, native, Harris owns the Philadelphia 76ers NBA team and the NHL’s New Jersey Devils. Rales, who lives in Potomac, Maryland, is a co-founder of Danaher Corp. and is worth an estimated $5.6 billion. The same group of investors last year made a bid to purchase the Denver Broncos, which instead sold for $4.65 billion to Walmart heir Rob Walton.
Apostolopoulos founded Six Ventures Inc., a private equity fund, and is managing partner of the Toronto-based real estate firm Triple Group of Cos. Last week, The Washington Post reported that he has toured the Commanders’ facilities. Apostolopoulos was interested in buying the Charlotte Hornets NBA team owned by Michael Jordan, according to ESPN.
Several names previously came up as potential buyers of the Commanders in recent months, including Amazon.com Inc. founder Jeff Bezos and music mogul Jay-Z. Houston Rockets owner Tilman Fertitta was reported as a possible buyer too, according to The Washington Post.
Commanders owners Dan and Tanya Snyder hired Bank of America Securities to consider potential sales, the Ashburn-based NFL team announced in November 2022. The NFL owners’ annual league meeting is taking place this week in Phoenix, and Tuesday’s schedule includes an off-the-record session among team owners. Any sale would require approval of three-fourths of the 32 team owners.
Snyder, the team’s owner since 1999, and the team’s head office have come under investigations by the NFL and Congress for alleged sexual harassment and fostering a hostile work environment. His wife, Tanya, took over as co-CEO of the team in 2021, after the NFL’s $10 million fine of the team for an “improper” and “highly unprofessional” workplace culture. At the time, there seemed to be little appetite among team owners to force the Snyders to sell. According to NFL bylaws, it would take the agreement of 24 team owners to oust another owner.
In December 2022, the House Committee on Oversight and Reform released a report finding that “sexual harassment, bullying and other toxic conduct” took place in the franchise’s operations, and that Dan Snyder attempted to intimidate witnesses in the congressional investigation.
The NFL also launched a second probe of the team in February 2022, led by Mary Jo White, a former U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York and former chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission. According to the Post, Dan Snyder has so far declined to be interviewed by White.
The Washington, D.C., attorney general also sued the Commanders and Snyder in November 2022, the Post reported.
Ashburn-based Fortune 500 IT company DXC Technology Co. has been penalized by the federal government for making “misleading” financial reports from 2018 to early 2020, according to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. DXC did not admit or deny the charges, but consented to a cease-and-desist order and agreed to pay an $8 million penalty.
The $8 million SEC penalty must be paid within 28 days of the order Tuesday. The SEC reported that DXC “materially increased its reported non-GAAP net income by negligently misclassifying tens of millions of dollars of expenses as non-GAAP adjustments for so-called transaction, separation and integration-related (TSI) costs and improperly excluding them from its non-GAAP earnings.”
DXC overstated its income by $83 million over three quarters in fiscal years 2019 and 2020, according to the SEC order. It misclassified certain expenses as transaction, separation and integration-related (TSI) costs when reporting non-GAAP — or general accepted accounting principles — income to investors. “Reasonable investors would have considered the … information to have been material in deciding whether to purchase DXC securities during the relevant period,” the order says.
In a statement, DXC said it had cooperated with the SEC and resolved the matter, which it said was related to its formation in 2017 from the merger of Computer Science Corp. and the Enterprise Services business of Hewlett Packard Enterprise Corp.
“DXC Technology has resolved this legacy matter, which related to the presentation of non-GAAP M&A costs principally related to the 2017 merger that formed DXC,” the company said in a statement. “Our current management team has proactively clarified its disclosure, reduced these non-GAAP costs and cooperated fully with the SEC, and is happy to put this matter behind us.”
The SEC report said that during 2018 through early 2020, members of DXC’s controllership reviewed the company’s TSI costs for accuracy and compliance to SEC standards. The former assistant corporate controller for external reporting questioned certain costs that were characterized as TSI costs but often received “inaccurate or incomplete information,” and often received answers to their questions orally, without written records of “how particular issues were resolved,” according to the SEC.
GAAP is a set of accounting standards followed by most businesses and the public sector, and are created and administered by the Financial Accounting Standards Board and the SEC, according to The Motley Fool. Companies use non-GAAP earnings to make their net income look better, often by eliminating non-recurring or other charges. A common form of non-GAAP measurements are earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or EBITDA.
By misclassifying TSI costs, the company “materially overstated its non-GAAP net income in three financial quarters” and “failed to evaluate the company’s non-GAAP disclosures concerning TSI costs.”
The SEC found that DXC “negligently violated the anti-fraud provisions of the Securities Act of 1933 and reporting provisions of the federal securities laws.”
In addition to paying the $8 million, DXC promised to develop and implement “appropriate non-GAAP policies and disclosure controls and procedures,” which must be completed within the next 120 days.
During the SEC’s investigation, DXC voluntarily undertook a review of its TSI practices and made witnesses available, according to the order. It also has replaced “nearly all of its senior executive and financial leadership personnel who were present during the relevant period.”
Last week, DXC ended buyout talks after a “financial sponsor” — revealed by Bloomberg as Baring Private Equity Asia last year — failed to raise enough capital. In late September 2022, DXC had been approached by the private equity firm and worked with advisers on the potential takeover.
Chairman, President and CEO Mike Salvino was Virginia’s highest paid CEO in 2021, with his pay totaling $28.7 million, a 32% raise from 2020. DXC posted $16.265 billion in 2022 revenue, down 8.26% from 2021, which also saw a 9.44% decline from DXC’s 2020 revenue, $19.577 billion. Salvino joined the company in 2019 and moved the headquarters from Tysons to Ashburn in 2021 as it moved to a hybrid-friendly workplace.
Ashburn-based Fortune 500 company DXC Technology Inc. has ended buyout talks after a “financial sponsor” failed to raise enough capital, the company announced Monday.
In a statement posted to its website Monday, DXC said that it would not comment further on the matter.
“Consistent with its fiduciary responsibility to maximize shareholder value, the company engaged in preliminary discussions and shared information with a financial sponsor,” the company said on its website. “Due to the financial sponsor’s challenges in raising the necessary capital, as a result of current market conditions, no formal proposal was received by the company and DXC has terminated the discussions.”
The Fortune 500 firm’s CEO, president and chairman, Mike Salvino, has said he is leading the technology services and consulting company through a multiyear “transformation journey” to become more focused and cost-effective. He was also Virginia’s highest-paid CEO in 2021, earning more than $28.7 million, a 32% jump over the previous year. But that pay has gone up while the company’s revenue has decreased. DXC posted $16.265 billion in 2022 revenue; it reported $17.729 billion in 2021. In February, the company reported $3.57 billion in revenue for the third quarter of fiscal 2023, down 12.8%, compared with the prior year period.
DXC stock price dropped with the news Tuesday, opening the day at $27.70 and ending at $26.47.
Could Beyoncé become a regular presence at Washington Commanders games? It’s within the realm of possibility. According to The Washington Post, Amazon.com Inc. founder and Executive Chairman Jeff Bezos and billionaire rapper Jay-Z (Beyoncé’s husband) may team up to buy the Ashburn-based NFL team, currently owned by Dan and Tanya Snyder.
On Wednesday, the Commanders announced that the Snyders had hired Bank of America Securities to consider potential offers for the team’s sale, according to a news release. Dan Snyder has been under increasing pressure to sell the team in recent weeks, as both he personally and the team’s head office have been under investigation by the NFL and Congress for alleged sexual harassment and fostering a hostile work environment. Recent leaks from inside the group of NFL team owners indicated that some want Snyder to sell the team, which he’s owned since 1999. Tanya Snyder, his wife, took over as co-CEO of the team in 2021, following the NFL’s $10 million fine of the team, which was formerly known as the Washington Redskins and by the interim Washington Football Team moniker.
Also on Wednesday, ESPN reported that the U.S. attorney’s office in the Eastern District of Virginia has opened a criminal investigation into allegations that the Commanders engaged in financial improprieties.
As owner of The Washington Post, Bezos already has considerable ties to the Washington, D.C., region, where he owns a $23 million mansion in the city’s tony Kalorama neighborhood. This fall, Amazon Prime started carrying the NFL’s “Thursday Night Football” games. The Post reports that Bezos is interested in bidding for the team, and that Jay-Z, who was part owner of the Brooklyn Nets NBA team and was allegedly eyeing the Denver Broncos NFL team last year, would be part of the bid.
Other people mentioned as having an interest in buying the Commanders are Entertainment Studios Inc. Chairman and CEO Byron Allen, who also tried to buy the Broncos; Tesla and SpaceX head Elon Musk, who took over Twitter this week for $44 billion; Washington Wizards and Capitals owner Ted Leonsis and Carlyle Group co-founder David Rubenstein, who also are bidding on the Washington Nationals baseball team; and former Broncos bidders Behdad Eghbali and Jose E. Feliciano, according to the Post report.
The Commanders — despite a mediocre record since 1999, when Snyder purchased the team, including no championship wins — are assessed as being worth $5.6 billion, although the price could climb higher, according to estimates.
The announcement that the Snyders are considering selling the team did not specify whether they would sell the entire team or minority shares in the team. Last year, Snyder purchased his former partners’ shares of the team for $875 million, taking on $450 million in debt, making him the full owner of the Commanders. He had been feuding with co-owners Dwight Schar, Robert Rothman and Frederick Smith, who bought into the team in 2003 but tried to sell their stakes last year, The New York Times reported.
Earlier this year, as Snyder and the team’s front office were accused of sexual misconduct and were the subject of NFL and congressional investigations, Virginia lawmakers backed away from offering a generous incentive package for the Commanders to build a new stadium in Loudoun County or Prince William County, and Maryland and Washington officials have similarly declined to welcome a new stadium to replace FedEx Field in Prince George’s County, Maryland.
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