Tag Archives: Bauer

Trevor Bauer designated for assignment by Dodgers

LOS ANGELES — The Dodgers announced on Friday that they had designated for assignment right-handed pitcher Trevor Bauer, who just finished serving a 194-game suspension for violating the MLB-MLBPA Joint Domestic Violence, Sexual Assault and Child Abuse Policy. 

“The Dodgers organization believes that allegations of sexual assault or domestic violence should be thoroughly investigated, with due process given to the accused,” the Dodgers wrote in a statement. “From the beginning, we have fully cooperated with Major League Baseball’s investigation and strictly followed the process stipulated under MLB’s Joint Domestic Violence, Sexual Assault and Child Abuse Policy. Two extensive reviews of all the available evidence in this case — one by Commissioner [Rob] Manfred and another by a neutral arbitrator — concluded that Mr. Bauer’s actions warranted the longest ever active player suspension in our sport for violations of this policy. Now that this process has been completed, and after careful consideration, we have decided that he will no longer be part of our organization.”

Independent arbitrator Martin F. Scheinman affirmed that Bauer violated the domestic violence policy while cutting Bauer’s suspension from 324 games to 194 games on Dec. 22. That reduction made Bauer eligible for immediate reinstatement since he had already missed 243 games between his time on administrative leave and the 144 games he served under suspension in 2022.

The Dodgers had until Friday to determine whether to place Bauer back on the active 40-man roster or let him go. They held organizational meetings, including some with clubhouse leaders, over the last 14 days before making their final decision. 

The club has seven days to trade Bauer, and if he is not traded, he will be placed on unconditional release waivers. If no team claims him, he will become a free agent. 

Barring a trade, the Dodgers will owe Bauer $22.5 million for the upcoming season. This was to be the final season of his three-year, $102 million contract.

Bauer, who will turn 32 on Jan. 17, was the first player to appeal a suspension under the domestic violence policy. While reduced, it’s still the longest suspension handed down under the MLB-MLBPA Joint Domestic Violence Policy, which was enacted in 2015. 

Bauer was initially placed on paid administrative leave after a San Diego woman accused him of sexual assault during two sexual encounters in 2021. The woman also submitted a temporary ex parte restraining order against him. Bauer maintained he did nothing wrong, saying the encounters were consensual.

A Los Angeles Superior Court judge denied the restraining order. In February 2022, the Los Angeles District Attorney’s Office announced that it would not pursue a criminal case against Bauer.

MLB conducted a separate investigation of its own to determine if Bauer violated the league’s domestic violence policy. Under the joint domestic violence policy agreed upon by MLB and the MLBPA, the Commissioner’s Office has the ability to suspend a player even if he has not been charged or convicted in court.

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Los Angeles Dodgers officially cut ties with pitcher Trevor Bauer who served suspension for violating MLB policies



CNN
 — 

The Los Angeles Dodgers have officially cut ties with pitcher Trevor Bauer, the team announced Friday.

The former Cy Young award winner was previously suspended by Major League Baseball for violating the league’s joint domestic violence, sexual assault, and child abuse policy, but was reinstated last month when an arbitrator reduced his suspension from 324 games to 194, effective immediately.

Bauer has not played since June 2021, after a San Diego woman claimed he had sexually assaulted her. The pitcher, whom a prosecutor in Los Angeles declined to charge with a crime, has denied the sexual assault allegations and maintained his encounters with the woman were consensual.

“The Dodgers organization believes that allegations of sexual assault or domestic violence should be thoroughly investigated, with due process given to the accused,” the team said in a statement Friday. “From the beginning, we have fully cooperated with Major League Baseball’s investigation and strictly followed the process stipulated under MLB’s Joint Domestic Violence, Sexual Assault and Child Abuse Policy.

The team said “two extensive reviews of all the available evidence in the case,” performed by MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred and another by a neutral arbitrator, “concluded that Mr. Bauer’s actions warranted the longest ever active player suspension in our sport for violations of this policy. Now that this process has been completed, and after careful consideration, we have decided that he will no longer be part of our organization.”

Bauer said on Twitter on Friday that he talked to “Dodgers leadership” in Arizona on Thursday and he was told they wanted him to pitch there next season.

“While I am disappointed by the organization’s decision today, I appreciate the wealth of support I’ve received from the Dodgers clubhouse,” he wrote. “I wish the players all the best and look forward to competing elsewhere.”

CNN Sports has reached out to the Dodgers for further comment

Bauer was placed on administrative leave by the league in July 2021 and in April he was suspended for 324 games. But on December 22 an arbitrator reduced the suspension, making him eligible to play next season.

At the time his attorneys – Jon Fetterolf, Shawn Holley, and Rachel Luba, – said: “While we are pleased that Mr. Bauer has been reinstated immediately, we disagree that any discipline should have been imposed. That said, Mr. Bauer looks forward to his return to the field, where his goal remains to help his team win a World Series.”

According to league rules, the Dodgers had 14 days from reinstatement – until Friday – to decide whether to put Bauer back on the team’s 40-man roster.

According to the team website, Bauer was designated for assignment, which means a player can be traded or released within seven days. If Bauer was released, any of the other 29 teams can sign him.



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Dodgers: How Does the Trevor Bauer News Affect LA’s Plan This Offseason?

Trevor Bauer has been reinstated after an independent arbitrator reduced his suspension from 324 games to 194. That means the Dodgers are on the hook for nearly 70% of Bauer’s $32 million salary in 2023, whether they keep him on their roster or not.

The #Dodgers plan to release Trevor Bauer but have not announced a decision.

Los Angeles had reportedly been trying to get under the luxury tax for next year, but that might not be possible now. (For more on why they might already be over the tax along with an explanation of why it’s a big deal to get under the tax, click here.)

So the question becomes, what does L.A. do from here? There are reports that the Dodgers don’t plan to play Bauer. If those reports are accurate, they could try to trade him and get a little financial relief from his contract, or they could simply release him.

But the Dodgers still have holes on their roster. As of now, Gavin Lux is their starting shortstop, and while they say they’re comfortable with that idea, they might prefer him and his athleticism at second base now that the shift has been banned. We also don’t know who will play center field for Los Angeles; they have internal options in James Outman, Trayce Thompson, and Chris Taylor, but they’re reportedly in the market for an established center-fielder.

In a way, this could free up the Dodgers to be more aggressive, because there’s not much benefit to being one dollar over the tax threshold instead of $20 million. If they accept that they’re over the tax limit anyway, a whole new world of opportunities opens up. Not as big a world as if the Bauer decision had been handed down before the Winter Meetings, of course, but the Dodgers weren’t likely to be handing out the kind of contracts a lot of the big free agents have gotten, anyway.

In a way, Bauer is the least consequential part of the big Bauer news. Figuring out what to do with him isn’t easy, but it’s a one-time decision. But having his salary on the books completely reshapes their thinking for 2023, which could change their strategy the rest of this offseason.

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Dodgers’ Trevor Bauer reinstated after suspension cut to 194 games

Trevor Bauer’s initial 324-game suspension for violating Major League Baseball’s domestic violence policy has been reduced to 194 games by an independent arbitrator, who also reinstated him.

Bauer’s legal representatives and his employer, the Los Angeles Dodgers, were informed of the arbitrator’s decision on Thursday afternoon, ending a seven-month grievance process and bringing some clarity to a saga that has been unfolding for the past year and a half.

Bauer has served only 144 games of the suspension, but arbitrator Martin Scheinman essentially gave him credit for the time he served on MLB’s restricted list in the second half of the 2021 season. Bauer will be docked pay through the first 50 games of the 2023 season but will be officially reinstated on Friday.

The Dodgers then will have 14 days, until Jan. 6, to determine whether to release him or add him to their 40-man roster.

The Dodgers weren’t expecting a decision until sometime in January and were caught off guard when they were informed of it three days before Christmas, learning the results of the ruling about a half-hour before MLB released a statement to the media, a source close to the situation told ESPN. The Dodgers countered with only a short statement that read: “We have just been informed of the arbitrator’s ruling and will comment as soon as practical.”

Bauer’s legal team — consisting of Jon Fetterolf, Shawn Holley and Rachel Luba — also put out a statement, writing: “While we are pleased that Mr. Bauer has been reinstated immediately, we disagree that any discipline should have been imposed. That said, Mr. Bauer looks forward to his return to the field, where his goal remains to help his team win a World Series.”

Bauer is entering the final year of a three-year, $102 million contract he signed with the Dodgers in February 2021. He will have lost $37.5 million of that contract through his suspension. The Dodgers saved about $28 million of his salary in 2022 and will save about $9.5 million in 2023, a circumstance that could allow them to dip below the luxury-tax threshold. Bauer’s remaining $22.5 million salary will be guaranteed even if the Dodgers release him.

Despite the reduction, Bauer’s suspension stands as the longest in the seven-plus years of a domestic violence policy that was jointly agreed to by MLB and the MLB Players Association in 2015.

“While we believe a longer suspension was warranted, MLB will abide by the neutral arbitrator’s decision, which upholds baseball’s longest-ever active player suspension for sexual assault or domestic violence,” MLB wrote in its statement Thursday. “We understand this process was difficult for the witnesses involved and we thank them for their participation. Due to the collectively bargained confidentiality provisions of the joint program, we are unable to provide further details at this time.”

Bauer, the 31-year-old former Cy Young Award winner, has been facing sexual assault allegations ever since a San Diego woman obtained a temporary restraining order against him near the end of June 2021. Bauer disputed her allegations and remains in litigation with the woman, whom ESPN has chosen not to name. Two other women from Ohio made similar assault allegations to The Washington Post, which Bauer and his legal team have also disputed.

The L.A. District Attorney’s Office declined to prosecute Bauer in February, but MLB handed him a 324-game suspension on April 29, twice longer than the previous longest suspension under its policy. Bauer then became the first player to appeal, triggering a prolonged process in which a three-person panel — consisting of one rep from MLB, another from the MLBPA and Sheinman, appointed from both parties — reviews findings and interviews witnesses to determine whether to uphold, reduce or throw out a suspension.

The subsequent grievance hearing began May 23, playing out in spurts until the end of December. The San Diego woman testified three separate times, a source with knowledge of the situation said. One of the Ohio women also testified but the other backed out, according to the Post.

Bauer hasn’t pitched since June 20, 2021. The following day, the then-27-year-old San Diego woman filed a request for a domestic violence restraining order (DVRO) in which she alleged that Bauer assaulted her over the course of two sexual encounters at his Pasadena, California, home in April and May of that year. The woman alleged that he choked her unconscious on multiple occasions, repeatedly scratched and punched her throughout her body, sodomized her without consent and left her with injuries that warranted a trip to the emergency room after rough sex. Bauer and his attorneys, Fetterolf and Luba, denied the allegations, calling them “fraudulent” and “baseless” in an initial statement.

MLB first placed Bauer on administrative leave on July 2, 2021, triggering an investigation. After that, the two other women from Ohio made similar allegations to the Post. In August 2021, a woman told the Post she sought a DVRO against Bauer in June 2020 and accused him of choking and striking her without consent during sex and sending threatening messages. That woman, the Post reported, dismissed her order six weeks later after Bauer’s attorneys threatened legal action. The second woman alleged to the Post that Bauer choked her unconscious without consent on multiple occasions dating back to 2013.

MLB said it conducted “an extensive investigation” into Bauer’s off-field conduct but did not disclose specifics of its findings, nor did it reveal how many women made assault allegations against him. Bauer, meanwhile, has denied wrongdoing, posting long threads through his Twitter account — some of them containing screenshots of private text messages – in an effort to show consent after each of the three women’s accusations. After the L.A. County District Attorney’s Office declined to file criminal charges in February 2022, Bauer released a seven-minute video on YouTube in which he categorically denied the San Diego woman’s version of events.

The DA’s Office, ruling six months after an L.A. judge denied the San Diego woman a permanent restraining order, rejected charges of assault by means likely to produce great bodily injury, sodomy of an unconscious person and domestic violence. But MLB, which, according to sources, heard similar allegations from multiple women, suspended him three months later.

Prior to Bauer, 15 players had been suspended under the domestic violence, sexual assault and child abuse policy that was introduced in August 2015. The policy, jointly agreed to with the MLB Players Association, grants MLB commissioner Rob Manfred the autonomy to suspend players even if they are not charged with a crime and does not require him to meet the proof-beyond-a-reasonable-doubt threshold required by the country’s law enforcement. Those suspensions — not counting that of former reliever Felipe Vazquez, who’s serving a jail sentence for sexual assault of a minor — have ranged from 15 to 162 games and were the result of negotiated settlements in which players waived their right to appeal. Bauer is the first of those players with more than one publicly known accuser.

The Dodgers canceled Bauer’s scheduled bobblehead night and removed his merchandise from their stores shortly after MLB first placed him on administrative leave in the summer of 2021, but they have barely commented on his situation publicly. Uncertainty over the arbitrator’s decision was seen as a primary reason the Dodgers, hesitant to exceed the luxury-tax threshold for a third consecutive year, mostly stayed away from star free agents this offseason.

In recent months, Bauer has continued to populate his YouTube channel with videos of him taking part in lively bullpen sessions and providing pitching tips. He put out a tweet moments after the arbitrator’s ruling became public Thursday:

Bauer has filed defamation lawsuits against two media outlets, Deadspin and The Athletic. He also filed suit against the San Diego woman, who followed with a countersuit in August. On Nov. 23, U.S. District Court Judge James Selna allowed the San Diego woman to proceed with her lawsuit and dismissed Bauer’s defamation suit against one of her former attorneys. In his ruling, Selna wrote that the initial denial of the restraining order by L.A. Superior Court Judge Dianna Gould-Saltman did not determine whether Bauer had committed an act of abuse and that neither party had asked her to make such a determination.

“The state court proceedings did not necessarily decide that Bauer did not batter or sexually assault [the woman],” Selna added.

Bauer won the Golden Spikes Award at UCLA in 2011 and was the No. 3 pick in the MLB draft that year. He clashed with teammates in Arizona, prompting a trade after his first full season, and had two notable incidents in Cleveland, allegedly cutting his finger with a drone before a 2016 playoff start and hurling a baseball over the center-field fence after being removed from an outing on July 28, 2019, three days before being traded again.

Bauer clashed with Manfred over his handling of the Houston Astros’ sign-stealing scandal and the commissioner’s efforts to market the game to a younger audience, among other topics. Bauer has built a reputation as a difficult teammate, but he is also considered one of the most forward-thinking, analytically minded pitchers in the sport.

Bauer made a case for a Cy Young Award in 2018, then won it during the COVID-19-shortened 2020 season while with the Cincinnati Reds. The Dodgers signed him later that offseason, outbidding the New York Mets despite rampant criticism surrounding Bauer’s history of bullying others on social media.

Bauer pitched like an ace for Los Angeles in the first half of the 2021 season, posting a 2.59 ERA in 17 starts. He hasn’t pitched since. And now the question is whether he’ll ever pitch in the majors again.



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Trevor Bauer suspension: Dodgers pitcher reinstated immediately after ban reduced from 324 games to 194

An arbitrator has reduced Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Trevor Bauer’s suspension under the league’s domestic violence, sexual assault and child abuse policy from 324 games to 194 games, Major League Baseball announced Thursday night. It is still the longest suspension under the policy in league history. 

“We have just been informed of the arbitrator’s ruling and will comment as soon as practical,” the Dodgers said in a statement after the league’s announcement. 

Bauer’s reinstatement off the restricted list is effective immediately, though Rule 2(c) gives the Dodgers two weeks to officially put him back on their roster. They have until Jan. 6 to activate Bauer or release him. The Dodgers will owe Bauer his 2022 salary no matter what, though they reportedly plan to release him rather than add him to their active roster.

Here is MLB’s statement:

“Today, the neutral arbitrator selected by MLB and the MLBPA affirmed that Trevor Bauer violated Major League Baseball’s Joint Domestic Violence, Sexual Assault and Child Abuse Policy.

“After an exhaustive review of the available evidence the neutral arbitrator upheld an unpaid suspension of 194 games. As part of the decision, the arbitrator reinstated Mr. Bauer effectively immediately, with a loss of pay covering the 144 games he was suspended during the 2022 season. In addition, the arbitrator docked Bauer’s salary for the first 50 games of the 2023 season (i.e., the period covering March 30, 2023 to May 23, 2023). While we believe a longer suspension was warranted, MLB will abide by the neutral arbitrator’s decision, which upholds baseball’s longest-ever active player suspension for sexual assault or domestic violence.

“We understand this process was difficult for the witnesses involved and we thank them for their participation. Due to the collectively bargained confidentiality provisions of the joint program, we are unable to provide further details at this time.”

Bauer, 31, has not pitched since June 28, 2021. Days after that start, he was accused of assault and placed on administrative leave by MLB while it conducted an investigation. The Pasadena Police Department undertook its own inquiry, but announced on Feb. 8 that Bauer would not face criminal charges in relation to the allegations. The league’s collectively bargained domestic violence policy allowed MLB to discipline Bauer even though no criminal charges were filed.  

In late June 2021, The Athletic reported details of a woman’s encounters with Bauer, which she says were initially consensual. “I agreed to have consensual sex; however, I did not agree or consent to what he did next. I did not agree to be sexually assaulted,” the woman said. The Athletic’s report, which includes graphic details from a restraining order request, including allegations that Bauer strangled and punched the woman, can be found here.

Bauer, the 2020 NL Cy Young winner, made 17 starts with the Dodgers in 2021 before being placed on leave. The Dodgers signed him to a three-year contract worth $102 million in February 2021. The contract included opt-out clauses after each season. Bauer will lose $37.5 million of the $102 million to the suspension. It would have been roughly $60 million had the full 324-game suspension remained in place.

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MLB star Trevor Bauer sues ex-lover for falsely accusing him of rape

Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Trevor Bauer, 31, has sued a woman who accused him of sexual assault after what he insists was consensual rough sex.

Bauer’s legal team filed a lawsuit in Los Angeles on April 25 against the accuser, Lindsey Hill, and her lawyer, Fred Thiagarajah, TMZ reported.

Neither has commented on the allegations they now face. 

The suit was filed two months after prosecutors in Los Angeles said they wouldn’t file charges against the sportsman, although he remains suspended from his team while a Major League Baseball internal investigation continues. 

Bauer and his lawyers haven’t specified the amount of damages they’re seeking, with an award likely to be decided at trial if they win.   

The one-time Cy Young award winner has long denied any wrongdoing in his sexual encounters with Bauer, which occurred in April and May 2021 at his home in Pasadena.

Texts exclusively obtained by DailyMail.com show Hill texted him after their first encounter urging Bauer to ‘choke me out’ and ‘gimme all the pain.’  

Trevor Bauer steps out of the courthouse after the last day of the hearings in August 2021. During those hearings, a restraining order imposed upon Bauer against Lindsey Hill was lifted

Bauer says that Hill concocted her a story about non-consensual sex alongside her lawyer Fred Thiagarajah. Thiagarajah told The Washington Post in February 2022 that his client had been ‘brutalized’ by Bauer

The attorney for Bauer’s alleged victim, Bryan Freedman, asked TMZ Sports to publish an unredacted photograph showing his client’s alleged injuries saying the damage could NOT possibly be part of a consensual encounter

Hill’s lawyer Fred Thiagarajah, pictured, is also being sued over claims he lied on his client’s behalf 

At the time of the sexual encounters, Lindsey Hill was 27 years old.  

Bauer has been suspended from playing in the MLB since July 2, 2021. 

The latest suspension expires on April 29. At the time of writing, MLB is continuing to investigate the allegations against Bauer.

In his lawsuit, Bauer admits to the sexual encounters with Hill but says that she gave him consent to sodomize, choke and hit her. 

Bauer’s suit accuses Hill of pursuing him after their first sexual encounter to entrap him into a ‘a rougher sexual experience.’

Texts obtained by DailyMail.com in July 2021 showed Hill telling Bauer how much she’d enjoyed rough sex with him after their first encounter  

The conversation then becomes increasingly sexual as Bauer asks her to describe what she wants him to do during their next meeting 

He alleges that she did that ‘so she could later claim this sexual experience was not what she requested and thereby lay the groundwork for a financial settlement.’ 

The lawsuit says that Bauer earnestly believed that Hill was just expressing sexual preferences during her pursuit of him.  

Due to Hill’s allegations, Bauer said that his relationship with the L.A. Dodgers was damaged thus costing him millions of dollars. 

Bauer was banned from playing shortly after he joined the Dodgers from the Cincinnati Reds. 

Following their liaisons, Bauer alleges that Hill concocted a story to police about sexual assault for financial gain. The suit says that Hill ‘generated a media blitz based on her lies,’ reports ESPN.

Her lawyer, Thiagarajah, is accused in the lawsuit of aiding Hill in creating her story.

Bauer goes on to say that the graphic images Hill’s face apparently battered and bruised were edited to appear worse, he says that Hill deleted phone records during the investigation and as well of making inconsistent statements. 

Initially, Hill alleged that she awoke following her second dalliance with Bauer with a bruised vagina and buttocks, black eyes, swollen and cut lips, scratches as well as bruising on her gums.

Hill said that following her second encounter with Bauer, she went to a hospital where she was diagnosed with an acute head injury while he says she left with a slightly swollen lip

In the latest lawsuit, Bauer says that Hill merely had a slightly swollen lip when she exited his home in May 2021. While Hill alleges that she went to a hospital where she was diagnosed with a head injury.  

One section of the suit read, ‘At all times during both sexual encounters, Mr. Bauer respected the boundaries established and agreed upon with [the woman].’ 

The lawsuit cites alleged text messages that Hill sent to her friends about a potential financial windfall stemming from her relationship with Bauer.  

The Los Angeles County District Attorney announced in February 2022 that no sexual assault charges would be forthcoming against Bauer. 

Bauer’s latest suspension from action expires on April 29. He’s been out of contention for the Dodgers since July 2021, shortly after he first joined the team from the Cincinnati Reds

At that time, Thiagarajah told The Washington Post that it would be ‘daunting’ for prosecutors to pursue charges against Bauer. 

He said that the decision not to move forward with charges was ‘not a declaration of innocence; it’s a declaration of ‘I don’t have enough evidence to prove this beyond a reasonable doubt.’ And there’s no doubt that Mr. Bauer just brutalized [the woman].’

The new lawsuit says that, ‘At the time that Mr. Thiagarajah made these statements, he knew that his client had submitted a `materially misleading’ Petition to the California Superior Court in order to obtain a restraining order,’ reports USA Today.

Earlier, in August 2021, the restraining order that Hill had implemented against Bauer was lifted after a judge ruled that he posed no threat to the alleged victim. The same judge ruled against Bauer’s legal team’s request for access to Hill’s phone records in April 2022.

This lawsuit is the latest legal action that Bauer has taken in relation to the allegations. 

In March 2022, Bauer filed suit against online publishers Deadspin and The Athletic, as well as the latter’s former reporter Molly Knight, over articles written about the original allegations. 

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Los Angeles Dodgers’ Trevor Bauer files lawsuit vs. woman who accused him of sexual assault

Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Trevor Bauer filed suit Monday against the San Diego woman who accused him of sexual assault, claiming defamation and tortious interference while seeking unspecified monetary and punitive damages.

In the suit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, Bauer’s attorneys say that the woman “fabricated allegations of sexual assault,” “pursued bogus criminal and civil actions,” “made false and malicious statements” and “generated a media blitz based on her lies” in an effort to “destroy” Bauer’s reputation, “garner attention for herself” and “extract millions of dollars.”

In a petition seeking a domestic violence restraining order (DVRO) that was filed on June 29, 2021, the woman — whom ESPN has chosen not to name — stated that Bauer took consensual rough sex too far during two encounters at his Pasadena, California, home in April and May 2021, alleging that he choked her unconscious on multiple occasions, sodomized her without consent and punched her all over her body, leaving her with injuries that prompted medical attention.

Bauer and his attorneys have firmly denied the accusations, calling them “fraudulent” and “baseless.”

The woman was denied a permanent restraining order following a four-day hearing in August, and six months later, in February 2022, the L.A. County District Attorney’s Office decided not to pursue criminal charges against Bauer. But Major League Baseball, which has the autonomy to suspend players for “just cause” under its domestic violence policy, is still investigating Bauer, who recently had his administrative leave extended through Friday.

In the suit, Bauer’s attorneys deny that he engaged in anal sex with the woman, punched her in the face, stomach or vagina, or scratched her on her cheek or on her back, as the woman said.

“At all times during both sexual encounters,” the suit reads, “Mr. Bauer respected the boundaries established and agreed upon with [the woman].”

The suit says that the woman, who at the time was 27 years old, continued to pursue Bauer after the first encounter with a goal of luring him into “a rougher sexual experience so she could later claim this sexual experience was not what she requested and thereby lay the groundwork for a financial settlement.”

The suit also references text messages the woman sent to friends in which she seemingly bragged about a potential payout, while noting inconsistent statements in her testimony during the DVRO hearing, saying that pictures of her injuries were altered and alleging that she “deliberately” deleted phone records during the process.

The woman, who provided photographs and medical records as part of her DVRO declaration, said she woke up the morning after the second sexual encounter with two black eyes, a swollen jaw and cheekbones, dark red scratches on the right side of her face, bruised gums, a lump on the side of her head, a split upper lip, black bruising over the top of her vagina and multiple bruises on her right butt cheek. The woman has acknowledged consenting to being choked unconscious.

The suit says that the woman instigated rough sex, citing a text message that was sent between their first and second encounters. In the text message, which became a central part of the August hearing, the woman invited Bauer to “gimme all the pain.”

The suit also says that the woman “did not have any visible markings or bruising on her face or body except for a slightly swollen lip” upon leaving Bauer’s house after the second encounter on May 16.

The suit also accuses one of the woman’s attorneys, Fred Thiagarajah, of defamation after he told the Washington Post following the District Attorney’s declination that Bauer “just brutalized” the woman and that the conduct she alleged was established with “100 percent certainty.”

Over the past two months, while MLB continued its investigation, Bauer’s lawyers filed defamation lawsuits against two media companies, saying that Deadspin knowingly published false information in its coverage of the sexual assault allegations and that The Athletic led “a campaign to maliciously target and harass” Bauer.

Bauer’s lawyers also subpoenaed the Pasadena Police Department for missing phone records from the San Diego woman, writing in a court filing that “the requested materials will further reveal Petitioner’s plan to ruin Respondent’s reputation and career and to earn a large paycheck by making false and misleading allegations in her Petition.”

But during a hearing held on April 4, L.A. County Superior Court judge Dianna Gould-Saltman — who dissolved the temporary restraining order against Bauer in August — ruled that the pitcher would not be privy to the woman’s phone records, stating that his attorneys did not file the proper motion and that the judge nonetheless would have been skeptical of an argument that the records would help them show the woman misled the legal process and must pay his attorneys’ fees.

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Trevor Bauer suing Molly Knight, The Athletic for defamation

Trevor Bauer is suing The Athletic and their former writer Molly Knight for defamation.

The Dodgers’ pitcher linked to the suit on his Twitter page on Tuesday.

In February, the Los Angeles District Attorney’s office announced that it would not be pressing charges over sexual assault allegations that the former Cy Young winner faced last year. Before that, a judge in the California Superior Court denied the accuser’s request for a restraining order.

Bauer was accused of punching and choking a woman unconscious during sex. The pitcher admitted to having rough sex with the accuser, but said it was consensual. During the case, Bauer’s attorney claimed that the pitcher had text messages from the accuser “involving requests to be ‘choked out’ and slapped in the face” and that “the woman spent the night, and left without incident, continuing to message Mr. Bauer with friendly and flirtatious banter.”

In the lawsuit against Knight and The Athletic, Bauer’s attorneys claim that Knight and The Athletic “defamed Mr. Bauer by creating and spreading the false narrative that Mr. Bauer fractured the Complainant’s skull.”

Bauer’s attorneys at Kinsella Weitzman Iser Kump Holley LLP and Zuckerman Spaeder LLP filed the suit Tuesday in the United States District Court Central District of California Western Division.

Trevor Bauer is suing Molly Knight and The Athletic for defamation.
Getty Images

“There was no basis for that assertion because the Complainant’s own medical records — which The Athletic possessed — showed that she had no such fracture,” the suit continues. “Nonetheless, consistent with their prior and subsequent expressions of animus toward Mr. Bauer, The Athletic and Ms. Knight publicized that false attack, which was picked up and further disseminated to a larger audience by other media outlets and social media sites.”

The suit also cited tweets from Knight that referred to the accuser’s skull as “cracked” or “fractured.”

“Defendants acted with actual malice because they deliberately ignored the truth — which was evident in the medical records possessed by The Athletic — and because the Defendants’ defamatory statements were part of a campaign to harass Mr. Bauer, as evidenced by, among other actions, their prior and subsequent false and misleading statements about his conduct and character, their efforts to dissuade Major League Baseball teams from signing him, and their strident complaints about the Los Angeles Dodgers’ decision to add him to their team.”

Molly Knight at Dodger Stadium in 2020.
Molly Knight / Instagram

This is Bauer’s second defamation suit related to this case. He also has sued the website Deadspin.

“We are aware of legal action taken by Trevor Bauer,” a spokesperson for The Athletic told The Post. “We’re confident in our reporting and plan to defend against the claim.”

Knight declined to comment for this story.

Earlier this month, MLB extended Bauer’s paid administrative leave, which he has been on since June 29, through April 16 as the league conducts an investigation into the allegations.

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MLB places Trevor Bauer on administrative leave for seven days as league contemplates possible suspension

USATSI

On Friday, Major League Baseball, in conjunction with the MLB Players Association, placed Dodgers pitcher Trevor Bauer on administrative leave for seven days. Mandatory reporting day in spring training for each MLB player is Sunday, so the seven days will be March 13-19. 

Bauer last pitched on June 28 last season. In the days following that start, he was accused of sexual assault and then was placed on administrative leave, eventually, via extensions, for the rest of the season (much of the extensions being one week at a time). On Feb. 8, we learned that Bauer wouldn’t face criminal charges on the matter. 

This doesn’t, however, prevent MLB from suspending Bauer. It has previously suspended multiple players after charges have been dropped. The league is fully within its rights under the domestic violence and sexual assault policy to continue its investigation and then apply any punishment it deems fits at the conclusion of said investigation. 

To this point, the only thing the league has said is that the investigation is ongoing. 

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts was asked about Bauer’s status Friday and he said he won’t “close the door completely” (via Juan Toribio) on Bauer joining the team in spring training. 

Bauer, 31, signed a three-year, $102 million contract with the Dodgers prior to last season. He was 8-5 with a 2.59 ERA and 1.00 WHIP with 137 strikeouts in 107 2/3 innings with the Dodgers before he was placed on leave. 

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Banana Bread Overnight Oats – Joy Bauer

I’m calling this overnight GOATmeal—but not because it contains goatmilk (it doesn’t!), it’s simply the “Greatest Of All Time” overnight oats—packed with energizing ingredients and dessert-like flavor. It’s super creamy and has all the cozy feels of banana bread… in pudding form.

While oatmeal is typically eaten warm, this type is eaten cold, straight out of the fridge. It reminds me of an indulgent chilled pudding or porridge. Just mix together all of the ingredients and allow the oats to sit and swell in the refrigerator. It takes about 3 hours to set, but because it’s so convenient to prep the night before, we typically let it sit overnight hence the name “overnight oats”. I find it’s a perfect remedy for hectic morning meals. Trust me, you don’t want to miss oat on this. But hey, if you prefer a warm breakfast meal, you can easily heat it up in the microwave right before eating (equally amazing).

Joyful note: The riper the banana you use, the sweeter it’ll be, and the easier it is to mash. If your banana is firm, you can peel it, slice it up and microwave it for about 20 seconds to soften (it’ll blend more seamlessly into the other ingredients). And for the ultimate creamy-crunchy spoonful, wait until right before serving to add the toasted pecans (they’ll soften up if they sit in the oat mixture overnight) Also, while I personally think this is sweet enough without adding honey or maple syrup, feel free to mix in 1 to 2 teaspoons if you decide it needs some. Of course, there’s always the option of sprinkling on some dark chocolate chips, too— I mean “chocolate chip banana bread” for breakfast? Yes, please!

  • Prep time
  • Total Time

This recipe makes 1 serving

Ingredients:
  • • 1 ripe banana
  • • ½ cup almond milk (or any other preferred milk)
  • • ¼ cup nonfat or low-fat plain Greek yogurt*
  • • ½ cup old-fashioned rolled oats
  • • 1 Tablespoon chia seeds or ground flaxseeds (also called flax-meal)
  • • ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
  • • ¼ teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • • A pinch of salt
  • • 1 to 2 Tablespoons toasted, chopped pecans, optional

*You can swap in part-skim ricotta cheese or whipped cottage cheese

Preparation:

In a small mixing bowl, mash the banana with the milk, yogurt and vanilla extract until well-blended. Mix in the oats, chia seeds (or ground flaxseed), cinnamon and salt. Stir until everything is mixed together.

Transfer to a small mason jar or pretty container with a lid, cover and stash in the fridge for at least 3 hours to overnight. Right before eating add toasted pecans and dig in!

Will last in the fridge for up to 3 days.

Nutrition provided using almond milk. Add 50 calories per Tablespoon of pecans, if you decide to add.

Try these Overnight Apple Pie Oats!



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