Patriots head coach Bill Belichick addressed the media on Wednesday for the first time since New England was docked two organized team activities sessions for violating offseason rules.
Belichick took responsibility for the loss of practices on May 25 and May 30 and expressed a desire to put it behind him.
"The whole situation is in the past," Belichick told reporters. "It's resolved and we've moved on."
The Patriots were reportedly penalized because of that resulted in players spending more time at the facility than allowed, ESPN's Mike Reiss reported last week. In addition, Belichick was also fined $50,000, per Reiss.
Patriots assistant Joe Judge was reportedly the coach at fault, Boston Sports Journal's Greg Bedard , as Judge allegedly conducted special teams meetings that caused players to be at the team facility longer than the maximum four hours.
Asked Wednesday what Judge's role with the team is, Belichick declined to offer any details, including Judge's official title.
"He'll do whatever I ask him to do," Belichick said. "It might change from time to time, he'll be involved in a lot of things."
After two seasons as Giants head coach, Judge returned to New England in 2022 as an offensive assistant and quarterbacks coach. The Patriots offense struggled throughout the 2022 season, finishing 17th in points scored and 26th in total yards. Judge had worked primarily in special teams during his previous stint in Foxborough from 2012-19.
"Joe is great. Smart guy, got a lot of experience," Belichick said of his longtime assistant. "Do whatever we need him to do, and he can do a lot. So he will."
Starting Wednesday, New England has six days of voluntary OTAs remaining before mandatory minicamp kicks off on June 12.