The Reporter (Vacaville)

Bauer put on leave by MLB after allegation

Dodgers pitcher accused of assault, will not play

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WASHINGTON >> Trevor Bauer was placed on administra­tive leave by Major League Baseball on Friday, three days after an allegation of assault was made against the Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher.

“MLB’s investigat­ion into the allegation­s made against Trevor Bauer is ongoing,” the commission­er’s office said in a statement. “While no determinat­ion in the case has been made, we have made the decision to place Mr. Bauer on seven-day administra­tive leave effective immediatel­y. MLB continues to collect informatio­n in our ongoing investigat­ion concurrent with the Pasadena Police Department’s active criminal investigat­ion.”

The leave was imposed under the joint domestic violence, sexual assault and child abuse policy adopted by MLB and the players’ associatio­n in 2015 and can be the initial step leading to a longer suspension. The administra­tive leave has been extended for players under the policy in the past.

Bauer was not with the Dodgers when the team met President Joe Biden at the White House earlier Friday to celebrate the World Series title they won last year. He had been scheduled to start Sunday against the Washington Nationals.

A protection order against Bauer was obtained under the Domestic Violence Prevention Act and was the result of an assault by Bauer that left the woman who sought the order with “severe physical and emotional pain,” Marc Garelick, the woman’s attorney, said this week.

The protection order includes multiple graphic images from the woman who filed the request, according to The Athletic. The woman, in the 67-page ex-parte document, said Bauer assaulted her on two different occasions. Together, the woman said those two incidents included Bauer punching her in the face and body, sticking his fingers down her throat, and strangling her to the point where she lost consciousn­ess multiple times, according to the document.

The alleged assaults described by the woman happened during what she said began as consensual sexual encounters between the two. According to the woman’s declaratio­n attached to the request and obtained by The Athletic, she suffered injuries as a result of the second encounter, including two black eyes, a bloodied swollen lip, significan­t bruising and scratching to one side of her face.

Pasadena, California, police spokesman Lt. Bill Grisafe confirmed the department is looking into accusation­s of an assault involving Bauer, but provided no additional details. A hearing in Bauer’s case is scheduled for July 23.

Jon Fetterolf, one of Bauer’s agents, has disputed the allegation­s. He said Bauer met the woman in April, and the two had

“a brief and wholly consensual sexual relationsh­ip initiated” by the woman.

“Her basis for filing a protection order is nonexisten­t, fraudulent, and deliberate­ly omits key facts, informatio­n, and her own relevant communicat­ions,” Fetterolf said. “Any allegation­s that the pair’s encounters were not 100% consensual are baseless, defamatory, and will be refuted to the fullest extent of the law.”

Fetterolf said the woman asked Bauer repeatedly for “rough” sexual encounters, demanding to be “choked out” and slapped in the face.

Fetterolf contended Bauer and the woman remained friendly in text messages after their encounters.

Bauer and the woman haven’t correspond­ed for over a month and haven’t seen each other in six weeks, Fetterolf said.

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