The Broncos’ player roster isn’t the only one to have undergone changes recently. Three of Pat Bowlen’s children no longer work for the team.

John Michael Bowlen, 30, Pat’s youngest son and a former marketing employee who worked out of Sports Authority Field at Mile High, had been placed on indefinite leave after he was arrested on domestic violence charges in June 2015. In April, an Arapahoe County jury found John guilty of harassment, and he was sentenced to 24 months of probation with drug and alcohol evaluations and ordered to undergo a mental health evaluation. According to a Broncos spokesperson, he is not with the team and is pursuing other opportunities.

Brittany Bowlen, 26, will begin working toward a master’s degree in business administration at Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business this fall after spending 10 months as a business analyst in the Broncos’ finance department. Brittany received a bachelor’s degree in business from the University of Notre Dame in 2013 and spent the next two years in a junior rotational program with the NFL.

Jane Elizabeth “Beth” Bowlen Wallace, 45, Pat’s second-oldest daughter with ex-wife Sally Parker, was the team’s director of special projects and events but has not been with the team for the past year as she pursued a law degree at the University of Denver. Beth graduated in May, and it’s unclear if she will return to the team.

Patrick Bowlen III, 32, Pat’s oldest son with current wife Annabel, remains a facilities coordinator with the team’s stadium management company. Amie Bowlen Klemmer, 47, Pat’s other daughter with Parker, lives in Hawaii. Annabel Victoria, 23, a student at the University of Colorado Denver, and Christianna Elizabeth, 18, are Pat’s youngest.

Pat Bowlen resigned control of the team in 2014 because of the progression of Alzheimer’s disease. Team president Joe Ellis assumed control and added the title CEO, while John Elway retained control of football operations, as general manager and executive vice president.

Long before Pat stepped down, however, he set up a family trust to serve as the vehicle to transfer controlling ownership of the team to one of his seven children. The trust is run by three non-family members — Ellis, team general counsel and executive vice president Rich Slivka and Denver attorney Mary Kelly — who will decide which child is best fit for the job.

“Pat developed a plan to keep the Broncos in the Bowlen family; it’s part of his estate plan,” Ellis said in July 2014. “He’s put the team in a trust, and he has asked me to run it. And I will do that.

“Long-term, as was stated in the release earlier today, the team will stay in the Bowlen family. And it is Pat’s hope, Mr. Bowlen’s hope, that a child will come along, earn the right to sit in his seat and run the team. And that child, having spoken with the kids, understands that they will never fill his shoes. But hopefully they will earn the right to sit in the chair someday.”