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FSU's leading rusher faces assault charge

By The Sports Xchange
Florida State Seminoles running back Dalvin Cook (4) is stripped of the ball by Oregon Ducks defensive back Erick Durgan during the third quarter of the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California on January 1, 2015.The Ducks beat the Seminoles 59-20 to advance to the College Football Championship game. Jon SooHoo/UPI
Florida State Seminoles running back Dalvin Cook (4) is stripped of the ball by Oregon Ducks defensive back Erick Durgan during the third quarter of the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California on January 1, 2015.The Ducks beat the Seminoles 59-20 to advance to the College Football Championship game. Jon SooHoo/UPI | License Photo

Another Florida State player faces an assault charge after allegedly hitting a woman.

Running back Dalvin Cook was charged with misdemeanor battery Friday in the wake of an alleged assault in Tallahassee, Fla., last month.

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Florida state prosecutor Willie Meggs issued a probable cause warrant for Cook's arrest and he turned himself in on Friday evening at the Leon County Jail, according to jail records.

The school indefinitely suspended Cook after the news of the charge.

Cook, a 19-year-old sophomore who was FSU's leading rusher last season, is accused of punching a 21-year-old woman in the face several times outside a Tallahassee bar after closing on June 23.

The alleged victim told ESPN.com that Cook punched her after she declined to give her phone number to one of his acquaintances. Then Cook and his associates told her they were football players who "could buy me in two years," she said.

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This is the second alleged incident involving an FSU player hitting a woman in the past three weeks. Freshman quarterback De'Andre Johnson was kicked off the team Monday after the state attorney's office released surveillance video of the 19-year-old punching a 21-year-old woman at a bar on June 24, the day after Cook's alleged assault.

"Recent events at Florida State University involving members of my football team have brought a lot of attention to the school and program," Florida State coach Jimbo Fisher said. "It is important to me that our fans and the public be aware that I do not tolerate the type of behavior that was captured on video and that was most recently alleged.

"We spend a good deal of time educating our student-athletes about appropriate behavior and their responsibilities as representatives of Florida State. The majority of our players are exemplary, but clearly we must place an even stronger emphasis on this, and I personally promise we will. I remain committed to educating our young men and holding them accountable for their actions."

Florida State president John Thrasher said in a statement: "I have asked coach Fisher and athletic director Stan Wilcox to develop a plan to help our student-athletes understand the consequences of these kinds of actions. This will include coach Fisher meeting immediately with his team to reiterate, in no uncertain terms, our expectations of them. I also plan to meet with the team, and we will be asking professionals who deal with these matters, including State Attorney Willie Meggs, to speak with them."

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This is the third time Cook has been in trouble at FSU. In June 2014, he was charged with criminal mischief after a BB gun battle damaged cars and other property at a Tallahassee apartment complex. He completed a pre-trial intervention program June 16, a week before the alleged assault.

Cook also was involved in an aggravated assault case in July 2014 in which police investigated accusations that two men pointed a gun at Cook's neighbor.

Cook's off-field missteps have overshadowed his performance in the field. The former "Mr. Football" in Florida led FSU with 1,008 rushing yards and eight touchdowns last season.

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