No need to makes things over complicated.
Simply say you are concern that Jameis will have off the field issues and so you wouldn’t draft him. That is a valid concern, you don’t need to go this DEEP with like this scout did via Pro Football Zone.
“Someone will take him in the first round, but how could you even let that guy in the building?” another scout said. “The second law of thermodynamics basically is the more ways something can happen, the more likely it is to happen. That’s true of players. The more ways they can (expletive) up, the more chances they (expletive) up. This guy’s got a lot of stuff that would lean him more likely to be a bust than a good player.” Played two seasons of baseball at FSU as a closer-outfielder. “If he doesn’t (mature) he won’t be playing football,” a third scout said. “Knows how to play the position. I don’t think he’s Andrew Luck. He’s not a John Elway arm coming out, but he’s a talented kid.” Tested poorly with 4.97 40, 28½ vertical jump.
When it comes to drafting players it is all a guessing game. You want to make educated guesses, but they are still just guesses. The big thing to me is if you think Jameis is a rapist or not. The other stuff he did in college was stupid and immature, but not so alarming that you would think he would become some sort of career criminal. With that being said there are many people in the NFL who believe Ben Roethlisberger strong armed women into sex. He has won two Super Bowls and has been given a chance to redeem himself.
So, being a bad borderline criminal off the field, doesn’t mean you can’t perform on the field. It is a different NFL now with harsher penalties for players who run afoul of the law, but in the end if you can play is all that really matters.
We will know if Jameis can play with the big boys soon enough.