(Stillwater) — Former Oklahoma State University football player Jamal Mosley was accused of rape by a woman in her petition for a protective order, which was dismissed when she failed to appear in court Wednesday.
OSU Football Coach Mike Gundy announced Tuesday that Mosley, 19, who was a 6’4″ 250-pound sophomore tight end, had left the team for personal reasons,. Mosley reportedly is no longer a student at OSU.
Payne County District Attorney Rob Hudson could not be reached for comment Wednesday or Thursday regarding whether he expects to file any criminal charges against Mosley in connection with the alleged sexual assault, which the woman claimed happened in his dormitory room on Friday, Aug. 21 while she was extremely intoxicated,
The following Tuesday, Aug. 25, she applied for an emergency protective order, which was granted that same day by Special District Judge Michael Stano — who then sealed all documents in the case, court records show.
However, following a judicial meeting Wednesday afternoon, all of the documents, including the petition which details the alleged rape, were unsealed. Earlier Wednesday, Special District Judge Luke Duel had dismissed the protective order when no one appeared in court on the matter.
The woman, who reportedly is an OSU student, wrote in her protective order petition, “On Friday, Aug. 21, I left the Tumbleweed in Stillwater at around 11:40 p.m.
“Jamal Mosley, OSU sophomore football player, picked (me) up in his tan Impala.
“I had thrown up shortly before, because I was very intoxicated, and friends of mine, as well as a security guard, advised me to leave.
“I don’t remember much of the night because I strongly believe I was passed out in Jamal’s bedroom at his dorm in Davis,” she alleged in her petition.
“I remember scenes in my head of short moments throughout the night.
“Jamal tried to kiss me and I told him no and began crying trying to push him off of me,” she alleged in her petition.
“After that, I don’t remember anything except seeing myself naked standing up in a reflection of a mirror.
“I don’t know how I got back to my apartment, but I’m guessing that Jamal dropped me off because I woke up the next day in my bed in a lot of pain,” around her genital area and rear, she alleged in her petition.
“I checked my text messages and Jamal had sent me a text that said, ‘You left your camera over here,"” she alleged in her petition.
The woman said that she called a female friend who told her that she had left the Tumbleweed with Mosley, according to her petition.
“This is when I started to remember the little bit of information that I can remember today.
“I went to the hospital and my nurse found up to six abrasions and bruises,” on her genital area, she alleged in her petition.
“My clothes, sheets from Jamal’s apartment, and my camera have been sent in for testing, and I am pressing charges.
“I have an EPO right now and I would greatly appreciate a permanent protective order for my safety,” the woman wrote in her petition on Aug. 25.
However, a search of court records shows that no charges have been filed against Mosley in the alleged incident.
When the emergency protective order was issued Aug. 25, it was made effective until Sept. 2 at 10 a.m.
Mosley, who had been personally served with it by the Sheriff’s Office on Aug. 26, and the woman were both ordered to appear in court at 10 a.m. on Sept. 2 before Judge Duel. However, neither did so and the protective order was dismissed by Judge Duel, court records show.
Mosley is due to appear in court on Sept. 21 before Judge Stano regarding a misdemeanor marijuana charge that was filed on July 8 — for his allegedly having at his residence on June 17 a small plastic bag containing a substance that field-tested positive as a small amount of marijuana.
Mosley was not arrested in that case investigated by OSU police, but instead sent a letter at Davis Hall by Payne County Assistant District Attorney Tyson Branyan on July 8 that he had been charged, court records show.
In the letter, Mosley was advised that he could arrange a voluntary appearance before the court on July 29, but that if he failed to do so, a warrant would be issued for his arrest.
Mosley did appear in court on July 29 before Special District Judge Phillip Corley, who allowed him to remain free on a personal recognizance bond pending a Sept. 21 appearance on Judge Stano’s misdemeanor docket.
If convicted of misdemeanor marijuana possession, Mosley could be given as much as a one-year county jail term, court records show.
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