BOSTON — A woman testified Thursday that New England Patriots safety Jabrill Peppers grabbed her by the neck, slammed her against the wall and pushed her down the stairs after another man called her cellphone several times while they were in bed.
She testified on the first day of the Peppers' trial on charges of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon. Along with her testimony, prosecutors showed several videos of the incident, in which Peppers can be seen asking the naked woman to repeatedly leave his house in Braintree, Massachusetts. The woman said Peppers was filming her and taunting her, as she tried to get her belongings and depart after the alleged assault.
The police report of the October incident supports the woman's testimony. Police said she refused to go to a hospital and was treated at the home for her injuries.
''He grabbed me by the neck and slammed me against the wall,'' the woman said, at times getting emotional. ''My feet weren't touching the wall and he was holding me up against the wall.''
The attorney for Peppers, Marc Brofsky, challenged the woman's account and the extent of her injuries during cross-examination — noting she waited to call the police until she left Peppers' house and didn't go to the hospital for treatment of injuries she sustained to her face and knee.
''If your head was smashed open, you were strangled and you were thrown down a set of stairs and you had serious injuries, wouldn't you go to the hospital,'' Brofsky asked the woman.
He also brought up a $9.5 million civil lawsuit the woman has filed against Peppers, noting she was ''looking for money.''
But the woman disputed that it was about money, saying, ''You can't put a number on trauma.'' She said she was also looking for an apology and for Peppers to get counseling for anger management.