The commish has spoken:
DP: Has he violated the personal conduct policy?
RG: Yes, there has been a violation of that. The issue here is with respect to a pattern of behavior and bad judgments. You do not have to be convicted or even charged of a crime to be able to demonstrate that you've violated a personal conduct policy, and reflect poorly not only on themselves, but all of their teammates, every NFL player in the league, and everyone associated with the NFL. And that is what my concern is, and I have expressed that directly to Ben, obviously, and I will be making a decision as soon as I possibly can.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/danpatrick/blog/107241/index.html?eref=sihp
Just curious, what if after the suspension is served the victim comes out and says that it was all false and made up? That nothing really happened? Not that I would believe that would happen in this case, at this point I believe her much more than him. But just trying to think about certain ramifications here that I have not seen addressed anywhere.