Hockey

Evander Kane sued by woman for alleged physical attack

A 21-year-old woman has sued Buffalo Sabres forward Evander Kane, saying he seriously injured her in the hotel room where he lives.

Sabres forward cleared of criminal charges for incident in March

In a counterclaim filed in New York State Supreme Court, Evander Kane is seeking dismissal of the July 1 complaint made against him by a woman, and legal costs. (Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

A 21-year-old Buffalo woman has sued Sabres forward Evander Kane, saying he seriously injured her in the hotel room where he lives.

Documents filed July 1 in Erie Supreme and County Court on behalf of Rachel Kuechle say Kane met her in a bar, invited her to what he said was a party and then attacked her, causing cuts and bleeding that required multiple surgeries.

Without providing details of how she was injured, her lawyers said Kuechle suffered "serious emotional trauma" and "serious, permanent and painful personal injuries."

In court papers, Kane's actions are described as "unwanted, unconsented to, violent and offensive in nature physical battery."

According to the lawsuit, Kuechle met Kane at the Encore Restaurant and Bar on the evening of Dec. 26, 2015, and Kane bought her drinks before inviting her back to his room on what her lawyers describe as a "false pretext" of a party.

The pair were taken to the Buffalo Marriott Harborcenter by Kane's driver, court papers say. Once in the room, Kane "engaged in extreme and outrageous conduct" toward Kuechle, the lawsuit said.

'Extremely exaggerated'

No monetary damages were specified in the court papers. A message left for Kuechle's lawyer wasn't immediately returned.

Kane had been cleared in March of any criminal charges after authorities investigated the December 2015 encounter initially described as a possible sexual assault.

Kane pleaded not guilty Monday to non-criminal harassment, disorderly conduct and trespass stemming from an unrelated incident at a bar on June 24.

In that case, Kane is accused of grabbing three women inside Bottoms Up, a Buffalo nightclub. A male bar employee said he also had a run-in with the NHL player.

Paul Cambria, Kane's lawyer, said those allegations were "extremely exaggerated" and his client "denies strenuously any wrongdoing."

The fourth player selected in the 2009 entry draft, Kane was acquired in a multi-player trade with Winnipeg in February 2015. He scored 20 goals and added 15 assists in 65 games last season and has two years remaining on his contract.