Reports: Hope Solo marries Stevens
U.S. women's soccer star Hope Solo and former Seattle Seahawks tight end Jerramy Stevens were married Tuesday night, according to reports, the same day he appeared in court after being arrested on suspicion of assaulting Solo.
KING5.com in Seattle reported that the two were married near Snohomish, Wash. in a small ceremony. Solo is from Richland, Wash.
A sports radio talk show host in Seattle, Dave Mahler, also tweeted the news: "Confirmed: Jerramy Stevens and Hope Solo were married tonight. Events of yesterday morning didn't change plans. Sounds like more facts comin."
Solo, who typically tweets regularly, had gone silent for over a week before finally posting on Twitter Thursday. First, she tweeted a photo of her and Stevens together and later said she was Tampa-bound.
"Off to Tampa and the good life! What kind of fish shall i go after this time?" she tweeted.
The two have been in a relationship for two months.
Stevens, 33, and Solo, 31, applied for a marriage license last Thursday, according to King County records. Both Solo and Stevens attended the University of Washington.
A Kirkland Municipal Court judge released Stevens after his court appearance, saying there was no evidence connecting Stevens to any assault, according to news reports. He was arrested early Monday for fourth-degree domestic violence assault but has not been charged.
The judge determined there was not enough to hold Stevens, but the case is still under investigation, Kirkland Police Lt. Mike Murray said Tuesday. Charges could be brought later if prosecutors and police find other evidence, he said.
Solo, the goalkeeper who most recently won gold for the U.S. team in London, appeared in the courtroom, but left without saying anything to reporters, according to KING-TV.
Police in the Seattle suburb of Kirkland responded to a disturbance at a home around 3:45 a.m. Monday involving a physical altercation between eight people during a party, said Lt. Murray.
He said officers contacted several people in the home who appeared intoxicated and didn't cooperate with police, but determined based on information and observations that there was probable cause to arrest Stevens for investigation of fourth-degree assault. Murray didn't identify the alleged victim, but court records show it was Solo, who received a cut to her elbow.
Court documents show that Solo's 34-year-old brother, Marcus, called 911, and that he and Solo told officers there was a party and blamed the disturbance on two to three unknown men who were at the party. Marcus Solo told police he used a stun gun on one of the men, who left the party before police arrived, according to court records.
According to court documents, a police officer found Stevens, ''who appeared to be hiding,'' lying between the bed and the wall in an upstairs bedroom. Stevens told officers he was sleeping on the floor and didn't hear the fight. The officer saw signs of a fight, and dried blood on Stevens' shirt.
The officer noted in his affidavit for probable cause for arrest that he arrested Stevens based on his admission that he argued with Hope Solo, the injury to her elbow, signs of a fight in the bedroom where Stevens was found and blood on Stevens' shirt. One 32-year-old woman was taken to the hospital for treatment of a hip injury, and another man suffered multiple bumps, scrapes and contusions, Murray said.
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Stevens was selected with the No. 28 pick of the 2002 draft by the Seahawks after a stellar career on the field at Washington. But he also was involved in incidents away from football that included reckless driving charges for crashing into a nursing home.
He was mostly a first-round bust with the Seahawks, except for the 2005 season when he started a career-high 12 games and had 45 receptions as the Seahawks won the NFC championship. His run-ins with the law weren't done when he left college. Stevens was arrested on reckless driving charges in 2003 in a Seattle suburb and in 2007 when he was charged with driving under the influence in Scottsdale, Ariz.
Stevens' most recent arrest came in 2010, while he was playing for Tampa Bay, when he was arrested the night before a game for possession of marijuana. He was almost immediately released by the team.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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