The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Report: Documents reveal new details of Hope Solo arrest

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U.S. women’s national team star Hope Solo was combative with officers after her arrest last year on accusation­s that she assaulted her half-sister and her teenage nephew, an incident during which authoritie­s also described Solo as the “primary aggressor,” according to an ESPN report Sunday.

Solo initially faced two misdemeano­r counts of domestic violence i n the altercatio­n at her halfsister’s house last June, though those charges were dismissed on procedural grounds earlier this year. Solo, who had pleaded not guilty, portrayed herself as a victim in interviews after the dismissal of the case.

The network said the report was based on police records, two sworn deposition­s obtained by “Out- side the Lines,” other documents and interviews with one of Solo’s alleged victims. It says Solo had been drinking when she arrived at the home of her half-sister, Teresa Obert, and was the aggressor in the altercatio­n, including slamming the teenager’s head into the floor.

The report also says that Solo was so combative after her arrest that she had to be forced to the ground by police and that she insulted officers.

According to the report, Solo suggested that two jailers were having sex and called another officer a “14-year-old boy.” When asked to remove a necklace, Solo told the officer that the piece of jewelry was worth more than he made i n a year, the ESPN report said.

Solo’s law yer, in response to a question from ESPN about the reports, re- sponded with a statement saying: “Police reports and other court documents clearly demonstrat­e that the alleged victims radically changed their stories on multiple occasions and twice refused to answer questions under oath, despite court orders. Had the case proceeded to trial and the witnesses been crossexami­ned under oath subject to the penalty of perjury, the defense would have proven that Teresa’s son, not Hope, was the true aggressor, and that Hope suffered a concussion as a result of her nephew’s unlawful conduct.”

Representa­tives for Solo didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request from The Associated Press for comment Sunday on the report. Solo and the U.S. women’s team are scheduled to begin play in the World Cup on Monday.

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