Sports US

Sherrone Moore had ‘long history of domestic violence’ against Michigan staffer, lawyer alleges

By Katie Strang, Austin Meek and Sam Jane

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Former Michigan football coach Sherrone Moore had a “long history of domestic violence” against a female football staffer during their relationship, the woman’s lawyer told police.

Detective Jessica Welker of the Pittsfield Township Police Department provided that information in sworn testimony at a complaint authorization hearing Friday prior to Moore’s arraignment on charges of third-degree home invasion, stalking and breaking and entering.

A transcript of the hearing, obtained by The Athletic, reveals new details about the circumstances that led to Moore’s Dec. 10 arrest. The female staffer told police that she disclosed her relationship with Moore to the university earlier that day and was preparing to leave town when Moore barged into her apartment.

The woman’s lawyer, Heidi Sharp of Clinton Township, Mich., made the 911 call to alert authorities that Moore was inside the staffer’s apartment. The woman’s lawyer told police she could hear screaming over the phone and the staffer told her, “He’s here. He’s here. Sherrone is here.”

The staffer told police that Moore grabbed knives and pointed them at her, then pointed the knives at himself and backed up when the woman put her lawyer on speakerphone, according to Welker’s testimony. Moore denied physically assaulting the staffer or “threatening her with any weapons” in his interview with police later that night, Welker testified.

Moore was not charged with assault. In a statement to The Athletic, the Washtenaw County Prosecutor’s Office said, “the evidence that was available to us at the time of the charging decision indicated that Mr. Moore had an intent to terrorize and harass the victim — which is the basis for the stalking charge. Given that his statements were those of self-harm, however, there was not sufficient evidence to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, an intent to assault or batter the victim.”

The prosecutor’s office said the case “remains under active investigation” and charges could be added or amended based on new evidence. However, the prosecutor’s office said it has not received “any requests for charges for any previous incidents involving Mr. Moore.”

Moore told police on the night of his arrest that he and the staffer “were in an intimate relationship for approximately two years,” according to Welker’s testimony. The woman told police she ended the relationship Dec. 8, two days before Moore’s firing, and told Moore she had “nothing more to say to him.” The staffer told police that Moore called her “approximately a dozen times and sent her text messages over the next two days.”

Lawyers representing Moore and the female staffer did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button