The Washington Commanders and owner Dan Snyder have been no strangers to legal troubles recently, as the organization has been investigated by the league for allegations of workplace sexual harassment involving female employees of the franchise. Now, Snyder and the Commanders could be in even more legal trouble. According to the Washington Post, Congress' House Oversight Committee has alleged to the Federal Trade Commission that the Commanders and Snyder “may have engaged in a troubling, long-running, and potentially unlawful pattern of financial conduct.” Specifically, Snyder's alleged wrongdoing involves underreported ticket revenue. Pro Football Talk has the details.

According to the Washington Post, the Committee sent a 20-page letter to the Federal Trade Commission regarding allegations that the team may have withheld as much as $5 million in refundable deposits from season-ticket holders, and that the team may have hidden cash that was to be shared by all NFL franchises.

Congress sent a report to the Federal Trade Commission that accuses the Commanders and Snyder of withholding as much as $5 million in refundable deposits to season-ticket holders, in addition to allegedly hiding cash that was meant to be shared among other NFL franchises.

Former Commanders employee Jason Freidman spoke before Congress, telling the Committee that the franchise kept two sets of books, with one that underreported ticket revenue. Friedman also reportedly provided Congress with documents showing that the Commanders withheld deposits from customers.

Snyder, who has clearly had a checkered past, could be in some big trouble if there is clear evidence of he and the Commanders' wrongdoing in this financial scandal.