Lawyers representing a 19-year-old woman say that charges have been filed after the college basketball player said she was attacked by the owner of a central Illinois night club earlier this month.
According to attorneys with Saulter Law, bar owner Steven Homan is facing a felony charge of aggravated battery in connection with the incident, which occurred on April 4.
Jazzpher Evans, a student and basketball player at Quincy University, was at The Barn night club in Quincy when she was involved in an altercation with the club’s owner, according to police and her attorneys.
Evans' attorney says that she was attacked while standing next to a DJ booth at the establishment. Her attorney says that Evans was violently pushed against a wall, then was thrown to the ground by the owner of the bar.
“He didn’t say anything to me. His first instinct was to shove me up against the wall, and that’s what he did, and he held me there. I put my hand up to defend myself, and that’s when he began screaming at me,” Evans said. “He told me to get the f*** out of the place and he started spitting in my face, and I put my hand up over my face and so I blocked it, and that’s when he grabbed my hand and he drove me to the ground.”
She was then placed in a chokehold and lost consciousness.
“I started to pass out, and I couldn’t breathe,” she said. “My friend begged him to put me down and he was like ‘no.’”
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Evans says that the owner of the club dragged her outside and slammed her to the ground, leaving her there.
“I woke up and I was outside on the ground,” she said. “One moment I thought I was enjoying my night. Next thing I knew I was outside. I had scrapes all over my face and my nose was bleeding.”
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Evans, a basketball player at Quincy University, suffered a traumatic brain injury and suffered multiple lacerations and cuts to her face, nose, hip, back and neck, attorneys say.
According to Saulter Law, the firm representing Jazzpher Evans in the case, the Adams County State’s Attorney’s Office has approved a charge of aggravated battery, a class 3 felony, in connection with the case.
“Jazzpher, her family and our firm understand the announcement of charges against Steven Homan is just a first step in obtaining the justice Jazzpher deserves as she makes a gallant effort toward a full recovery,” the firm said in a statement. “While the news of changes spark hope, we remain relentless in our pursuit that Steven Homan is held fully accountable for his wrongdoing and the trauma he inflicted on Jazzpher.”
Attorneys say a rally and march will be held Sunday afternoon in Quincy to show support for Evans.
According to a press release from the Quincy Police Department, an investigation remains ongoing in the case.
They are also calling on anyone with information on the incident to come forward.
According to Quincy Police Chief Robert Copley, the city attorney is looking into potential actions against the bar, including potentially pulling its license after the incident “because of the seriousness” of the attack.
The owner of the bar has not responded to NBC 5's requests for comment.
Shavon Evans, Jazzpher’s mother, recounted the emotions of finding out what had happened to her daughter, whom she described as an honors student and basketball player who has been shaken to her core by the incident.
“What I heard was her spirit being broken, and all that hurt and all the tears in her voice, (and) that she had been attacked by a man that she had never seen before,” she said. “And that broke my heart. When you send your children off to college, you expect for them to be safe. You don’t expect for them to get attacked.
"This man spit in my daughter’s face…and then threw her out like trash, like she’s nothing," she added.