Updated: July 23, 2009, 3:44 PM ET
Michael Vick lawyer denies strip club reports
Email Print Share <script type="text/javascript"> var stobj = SHARETHIS.addEntry({ title:"Michael%20Vick%20lawyer%20denies%20strip%20club%20reports", url:"http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/wire?section=nfl%26id=4351227", published: "2009-07-23" }); stobj.attachButton(document.getElementById("espnstlink")); </script>
<cite class="source"> Associated Press
</cite>
<!-- end mod-article-title --> <!-- begin story body -->
RICHMOND, Va. AP) --
Michael Vick's lawyer vehemently denied reports Thursday that the suspended NFL star spent his first night of freedom from federal custody at a Virginia Beach strip club.
"It is absolutely, categorically false," Lawrence Woodward told The Associated Press.
An Internet blog reported that Vick was seen at the strip club Atlantis on Monday night, hours after he completed his 23-month sentence for operating a dogfighting ring. Woodward said Vick was not in Virginia Beach that night and has not been to any strip club.
"He has been spending time with his family and friends and working with his advisers on legal matters and trying to get back to playing football," Woodward said.
Vick also denied the reports in an interview with the Daily Press of Newport News.
"That's crazy," he told his hometown newspaper. "That is the last place on my mind. I was out of town. I guess it's just someone trying to be hurtful."
Vick, 29, is expected to meet soon with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell in hopes of getting his suspension lifted. Goodell has said Vick needs to show genuine remorse and that he has changed.
The commissioner said Tuesday that he hoped to make a decision "in the near future." NFL training camps open for veterans next week.
The blog thebiglead.com, which some newspapers referenced on their Web sites, quoted a DJ who refused to be identified as saying Vick was at Atlantis with NBA free agent Allen Iverson.
Leon Rose, Iverson's agent, said the basketball star hasn't seen Vick since the former
Atlanta Falcons quarterback's release from prison.
The voice mailbox at Atlantis was full and unable to accept messages Thursday.
Vick served most of his sentence at the federal penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kan., before being transferred to home confinement in late May. The electronic monitor he wore on his ankle during two months of home confinement in Hampton was removed Monday morning, freeing Vick from federal custody.