Avon Lake, Ohio – Cleveland’s defense struggle, Brows Hall, has not recognized competition with accusations related to the internal incident since the start of this summer.
Hall, 21, joined Peru Thursday in front of the municipal court of Aivon -Tek on hooliganism. Judge Allison Manning found him guilty. She suspended his jail sentence by 30 days and fined him $250. She also placed him on two years of unrelated probation.
The sentence allows Manning to reimpose the 30-day jail term if Hall is charged with other criminal offenses while on probation. Hall was initially charged with domestic violence, a first-degree misdemeanor.
He pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct, a minor charge, and Avon prosecutor Richard Clay asked the judge for a suspended sentence. “I regret this situation as a whole,” said the court. “I am consulting and trying to do it better than me.”
After the incident, he was on the list of commissioners, so the newcomer could not play the game or frown.
Hall’s attorney, Kevin Spellacy, told reporters after the hearing that they will work with the NFL to get Hall on the field this season.
Last week, a protection order between Hall and his fiancée, who initially accused him of domestic violence, was dropped at the fiancée’s request.
Attorney Eric Long, who represented the woman, was in court but his client was in the jury box during the hearing. Long told Manning that her fiance was pleading guilty to the lesser offense in favor of Hall.
He declined to comment further to reporters after the hearing. On December 12, police were dispatched to the Avon home where Hall, her fiance and her mother lived to investigate a domestic violence allegation against Hall, where the bride and her mother told police that Hall had shoved the bride and thrown a baby bottle at her head.
They also said he dragged the fiancée out of the house and down the driveway and that he punched holes in the wall. When officers arrived, they found damage in the home they believed corroborated parts of the fiancée’s story, police said.
The victim initially accused Hall of putting a gun to her head and threatening to kill her, a statement she recanted in a report filed with Avon police later that week. Police released the report Thursday.
“I don’t remember having a gun pointed at my hand [sic],” the woman wrote. “I don’t remember seeing any weapons around me.”
The bride also said in a later statement that some of the damage to the house may have been caused by the bed being moved.
“That night was a blur and nothing that was said was consistent with the events,” the woman said in a later statement. This isn’t the first time the couple has been victims of a domestic incident: Last year, Hall’s fiance was charged with domestic violence after police said he smashed a glass bottle over her head outside Columbus Airport. As that case was later dismissed.