A former ESPN radio host in Cleveland has apparently lost her job with the station after accusing Jabrill Peppers of using the "lean" and the "molly," and on Friday, Peppers aggressively refuted her claims.

Peppers drew major red flags leading up to the 2017 NFL Draft when it was reported that he had a diluted sample at the NFL combine. It was believed he might slide in the draft, but Cleveland scooped him up with one of its three first-round picks.

The welcome he has gotten from at least one media member has been less than friendly. And borderline libelous. Sabrina Parr, who worked on ESPN 580 in Cleveland, went off on a rant about Peppers being "high out of [his] mind" within the first week of being in Cleveland and called him "another Josh Gordon."

"We're talking about Peppers and how he's on the 'lean' and the 'molly,'" Parr is heard saying on the recording. 

"Listen, the guy's not going to make it, OK? The guy's not going to make it through the season. I told Hammer last week, he's another Josh Gordon," Parr added. "I'm telling you, I've seen it first-hand from a different vantage point. It's the same thing all over again. 

"How are you already high out of your mind when you've only been here a week?"

"We're not talking about all the kids. We're talking about Peppers, and how he's not going to make it, because he's on the 'lean' and the 'molly,'" Parr added later. 

The lean is some form of "purple drank" (codeine syrup) that has been an issue for other players in the NFL, including Rolando McClain and JaMarcus Russell. Molly is a form of MDMA.

At one point during the show, the hosts claimed they were receiving calls from Peppers himself, as well as people from the New Jersey area, which is where Peppers is from. And, apparently, the Browns requested a copy of the first segment where Parr initially accused Peppers.

Suffice to say this went over poorly. According to Awful Announcing, the radio station parted ways with Parr.

On Friday, Peppers was asked about the claim from Parr and he flatly denied them.

"Absolutely not, never in my life. So I'm not going to get into that," Peppers said via Mary Kay Cabot of Cleveland.com. "I'm not going to get into that. Whatever drug she's said I've done, I've never done in my life."

It's pretty unlikely Peppers would decide to pursue any legal action against Parr -- she would have to willingly know what she said was false and/or have a purely malicious intent to prove what she said was libel. But it wouldn't be out of the question if the level of his outrage is high enough.