East Bay Times

Kanes drop domestic violence restrainin­g orders

- By Curtis Pashelka cpashelka@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Domestic violence restrainin­g orders previously filed against one another by suspended Sharks forward Evander Kane and his estranged wife, Anna, have been withdrawn and the pair are moving forward with other issues related to their pending divorce, according to court documents.

In a brief filed Oct. 13 in Santa Clara County Superior Court, the parties agreed to dismiss the orders and maintain a “respectful distance from one another whenever possible and shall minimize their situations of closer physical proximity.” They also agreed to communicat­e exclusivel­y through email on matters only concerning their children, unless it’s an emergency.

A hearing scheduled for Tuesday was vacated. Dennis J. Luca, Anna Kane’s attorney, said the parties are now working with a private mediator to settle other issues such as custody, visitation, child support, spousal support,

and attorney fees.

Luca declined to comment further on the dismissal of the filings, noting that mediation is confidenti­al

in California. Evander Kane’s attorney, Travis Krepelka, didn’t respond to an email seeking to confirm the nature of the remaining issues.

In September, Anna Kane in a temporary restrainin­g order applicatio­n, leveled accusation­s of physical abuse and sexual assault against the Sharks forward, saying he had a “history of domestic violence against me” and that she “walked on eggshells for fear that he would get mad and take out his anger on me.”

“In the early part of our marriage, it was verbal abuse,” she wrote, “but I eventually became his punching bag.”

Evander Kane denied abusing his estranged wife after the claim became public and in a recently concluded investigat­ion, the NHL said that allegation­s of domestic violence made by Anna Kane could not be substantia­ted.

The league, though, suspended Kane for 21 games without pay for submitting a fake COVID-19 vaccinatio­n card, costing him roughly $1.68 million of his $7 million salary for this season. Kane is considered

a non-roster player and the soonest he could return to play would be Nov. 30 when the Sharks are in New Jersey to play the Devils.

In August, the court granted Evander Kane a temporary restrainin­g order against Anna after he, in court documents, accused her of violence, saying in one argument that she hit him “7-8 times in

the face with her fist.” The incident, Evander Kane alleged, was the first of several that happened between 2019 and 2021.

Travis Krepelka, Evander Kane’s attorney, said in a statement last month that Anna Kane’s applicatio­n for a temporary restrainin­g order was “retaliator­y,” adding that she was “already the restrained party under a temporary domestic violence restrainin­g order.”

Anna Kane first filed for divorce on July 16, two weeks before their strife became

public when she accused him on Instagram of gambling on — and throwing — NHL games. The league investigat­ed that claim and found no evidence, though Kane’s gambling and financial woes are well documented. The former couple has a 15-monthold daughter, and Anna Kane is expecting a second child in early 2022, according to court documents.

Kane is in year four of a seven-year, $49 million contract he signed in May 2018 with the Sharks.

 ?? NHAT V. MEYER — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? Evander Kane of the San Jose Sharks and his estranged wife, Anna, have withdrawn the domestic violence restrainin­g orders both filed against each other, according to court documents filed on Oct. 13.
NHAT V. MEYER — STAFF ARCHIVES Evander Kane of the San Jose Sharks and his estranged wife, Anna, have withdrawn the domestic violence restrainin­g orders both filed against each other, according to court documents filed on Oct. 13.

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