USA TODAY US Edition

What prosecutor­s had on Patricia in sexual assault case

- Tresa Baldas

DETROIT – The prosecutio­n’s witness list in the sexual assault case against Lions coach Matt Patricia included a nurse, doctor, police detective, police officer and college friend of the alleged victim, according to court documents obtained by the Detroit Free Press.

The documents shed light on how police and prosecutor­s built their case against Patricia, who was set to go to trial on Oct. 21, 1997, until his accuser decided she couldn’t take the stress. The charges were dropped 10 months after the alleged incident.

According to court documents, the alleged victim was treated at Valley Regional Medical Center in Brownsvill­e, Texas, which is about a 20-minute drive from South Padre Island. That’s where the woman claims Patricia and a college friend sexually assaulted her in a hotel room during a March 1996 spring break trip.

Prosecutor­s, court records show, obtained medical evidence.

“In a sexual assault case, part of the investigat­ion is medical … the victim is taken to a hospital to have medical exams taken on her to corroborat­e (her claims),” Cameron County District Attorney Luis Saenz said Friday.

It is not known whether DNA evidence was obtained.

Former emergency room nurse Nancy Nadeau, 54, one of the prosecutio­n’s witnesses, declined to comment on the case citing HIPPA rules. But she did say that generally, when sexual assault victims go to the length of going to a hospital for testing and police are involved, that raises suspicion that “something happened.”

Former South Padre Police Chief E.E. Eunice, who oversaw the police department during the alleged incident, said “it’s likely a detective took the person to the hospital for the examinatio­n,” as is customary in sex crimes.

“They were slowly progressin­g,” Eunice said of the prosecutor’s office, noting he couldn’t recall the investigat­ion given it happened so long ago. “During spring break, there are thousands of people on the island. Based on my experience­s, a sexual assault like this is not necessaril­y a rarity.”

Saenz said during spring break, the DA’s office, on average, handles two to five sexual assault cases, half of which end like the Patricia case: Charges are dropped because the accuser decides not to testify.

“It’s more often than not a consent issue. The defendant said she consented and the victim says, ‘ No, I did not.’ It’s not whether or not there was sexual activity. The key question is the con- sent,” Saenz said.

Patricia and a former college friend Greg Dietrich were indicted by a Texas grand jury in 1996 on aggravated sexual assault charges. The pair were accused of bursting into a 21-year-old college student’s hotel room at 6 p.m. and sexually assaulting her, according to the Brownsvill­e Herald newspaper.

The woman told police she knew both men and had befriended them on the beach before the alleged attack, the newspaper reported. Patricia and Dietrich were arrested that same night and released on bond. Five months later, they were indicted by a grand jury. In January 1997, the case was dismissed.

In the Patricia case, the NFL coach has adamantly maintained he is innocent and was falsely accused.

“I was innocent then, and I am innocent now,” Patricia said last week.

The Lions organizati­on is standing by Patricia. The NFL has said it is investigat­ing.

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