The Pasadena (Calif.) Police Department has concluded its investigation into the assault allegations surrounding Trevor Bauer and turned the case over to the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office, Lt. Carolyn Gordon told ESPN on Friday.
The District Attorney’s Office will now decide whether to move forward with the case.
Earlier Friday, Major League Baseball extended Bauer’s administrative leave a seventh time for an additional week. The leave now runs through Sept. 3.
Bauer has been accused of sexual assault by a woman who obtained a temporary restraining order against him in late June. In her initial declaration, the woman said Bauer choked her unconscious multiple times, sodomized her without consent and punched her all over her body over the course of two sexual encounters at his Pasadena, California, home on April 22 and May 16, leaving her with injuries that prompted medical attention.
On Aug. 19, at the conclusion of a four-day hearing, a Los Angeles Superior Court judge dismissed the woman’s request for a permanent restraining order, ruling that Bauer did not pose a continual threat and that her injuries were not the result of anything she didn’t verbally consent to during what Bauer’s legal team called consensual rough sex.
The woman said the encounters were initially consensual — including a request to be choked unconscious, as depicted in messages between her and Bauer — but stated during a lengthy testimony that Bauer took it too far.
Bauer, who continues to be paid while on administrative leave, hasn’t pitched for the Los Angeles Dodgers since June 28 and hasn’t been around the team since MLB first began its investigation on July 2. MLB, which requires consent from the MLB Players Association every time it extends his administrative leave, is not expected to make a decision on a potential suspension until after the District Attorney’s Office decides on possible charges.
The 2020 National League Cy Young Award winner with the Cincinnati Reds, Bauer stands as the highest-paid player in 2021, with a salary nearing $40 million.
The Pasadena Police Department presented the District Attorney’s Office with an extensive amount of information resulting from an investigation that lasted more than three months, which means it might still be a while before Bauer learns if he will be criminally charged.
On Aug. 14, the Washington Post published a story stating that an Ohio woman accused Bauer of punching and choking her during sex in their three-year relationship and that she filed a restraining order petition last summer, only to withdraw it six weeks later.
Bauer’s attorneys called that woman’s allegations “categorically false” and have firmly denied the more recent assault allegations.