Santa Fe New Mexican

Okla. prosecutor won’t charge Sooners running back Anderson with sex assault

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NORMAN, Okla. — An Oklahoma prosecutor decided against charging Sooners running back Rodney Anderson with sexual assault on Thursday, clearing a major cloud hanging over the team ahead of its College Football Playoff semifinal against Georgia.

“Definitely, charges are not warranted under these circumstan­ces,” Cleveland County District Attorney Greg Mashburn said during a news conference.

The accusation stemmed from a petition for a protective order in which a woman said Anderson assaulted her in her apartment last month and that she feared for her safety. Anderson had gone to her home after the two met during a night of drinking.

Mashburn’s assistant prosecutor, Susan Caswell, said one of the woman’s close friends told an investigat­or the accuser called the friend from a bathroom saying she was excited that Anderson was at her house.

“She said that she had vomited, but intended to brush her teeth and go back and kiss him some more,” Caswell said, describing what the friend told the investigat­or. “She sounded tipsy, but not drunk.”

Caswell said two other witnesses relayed similar accounts — that they understood that Anderson and the woman had a good time. They added that the woman had hoped to have a romantic relationsh­ip with Anderson.

Anderson has been one of Oklahoma’s breakout stars after season-ending injuries the past two years. He leads the Sooners with 960 yards rushing and 11 touchdowns. Anderson took over this year for departed running back Joe Mixon, who was suspended for a year after he punched a woman in a restaurant in July 2014. Mixon is now with the NFL’s Cincinnati Bengals.

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