Barely two weeks after the initial news of a daily fantasy scandal broke, an independent law firm has cleared the DraftKings employee at the center of the crisis from any wrongdoing. According to international firm Greenberg TraurigEthan Haskell did not use proprietary DraftKings lineup information to his advantage. One important note: The results of the independent investigation were released through DraftKings and not Greenberg Traurig itself.

Haskell was accused of harnessing insider info to help his FanDuel team (as DraftKings employees were previously not allowed to use their own site, but were free to play on competitors). In the same week that he accidentally tweeted lineup information, Haskell won $350,000 on FanDuel. Here’s what DraftKings had to say about the investigation in conclusion:

GT’s independent investigation has confirmed the Company’s conclusion that Mr. Haskell could not possibly have entered the winning lineup based upon his receipt of the Company’s nonpublic aggregate ownership percentage information, because he did not receive that information until 40 minutes after the lineup was locked.

Essentially, the investigators confirmed that while the lineup information was sent to Haskell’s email at 1:40 p.m, it was a full 40 minutes after the FanDuel lineups were locked.

This is basically what DraftKings has been saying all along (that its employee couldn’t have used the proprietary information for his own advantage).

In response to the crisis, daily fantasy companies announced that all employees have been banned from playing daily games for money.

DraftKings said that the full report from Greenberg Traurig would not be made public. This is important to remember. The fact that it was touted as an independent investigation is marred slightly, since the results are viewed only through the prism of DraftKings’ own press release.