According to a report by Pro Football Talk, the New York Jets is likely to be fined with the second suspension on its roster.

Quarterback Erik Ainge received a four-game suspension for violating the league’s steroids and related substances policy. Ainge tested positive for a banned diuretic allegedly given to him by his girlfriend.

The first Jets player to commit doping infringement was running back Jesse Chatman, who also received the same penalty for a similar offense. Chatman tested positive for bumetanide, also a diuretic.

From PFT:

Under a new (and still somewhat confusing) league policy aimed at giving teams an incentive to encourage good behavior from their players, the New York Jets face a fine as a result of the four-game suspension imposed on quarterback Erik Ainge.

The new policy, which came to light in the wake of the Pacman Jones suspension, applies when a franchise has a second player suspended for off-field conduct in a given league year.  Because running back Jesse Chatman was suspended at the start of the season for violating the policy regarding anabolic steroids and related substances, Ainge’s suspension triggers the fine.

Diuretics are considered masking agents for anabolic steroids and other performance-enhancing drugs by rapidly diluting urine through increased renal flow. Other commonly used masking agents are epitestosterone, probenecid, and alpha-reductase inhibitors. Probenecid, prescribed to treat gout and hyperuricemia, reduces the renal excretion of drugs such as anabolic steroids. Alpha-reductase inhibitors, on the other hand, are drugs used to treat benign prostate hyperplasia and alopecia. One of the most popular brands of alpha-reductase inhibitors is Proscar.