CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. (CVILLE RIGHT NOW) — Former University of Virginia football player Jahmal Edrine’s defense attorney and the prosecutor clashed over text message evidence during the bond hearing for Edrine’s sexual assault case Wednesday in Albemarle County Circuit Court, before Judge Cheryl Higgins set Edrine’s bail at $25,000.

Higgins required Edrine to wear an ankle monitor, have no women in his apartment that are not biologically related to him and no direct or indirect contact with the complainant. Edrine will have no restrictions on where he can go within Virginia, but cannot leave the Commonwealth without court approval. His next trial date will be March 13 at 9:30 a.m.

The defense’s bond memorandum argued that Edrine, who was charged with one count of rape and abduction on Thursday, and the complainant had engaged in a consensual sexual encounter in which Edrine had not withdrawn quickly enough before ejaculating.

The defense argued the complainant denied she had been raped in text messages and sought a rape kit in her home state of Florida solely because she was concerned about potential STDs and pregnancy.

Assistant Commonwealth Attorney Susan Baumgartner said this version of events was filled with errors and accused the defense of attempting to try the case in the media. She then submitted an additional 150 pages of text messages between Edrine and the complainant, all sent within 48 hours of the Aug. 25 encounter.

Among the handful Baumgartner read in court were texts from the complainant that read, “I told you ‘No’ twice, three times actually,” in reference to Edrine’s act of ejaculating in her, before she accused Edrine of not knowing what the word “No” meant. The complainant also wrote to Edrine that, “You sending money doesn’t undo what you did.”

The memorandum disclosed Edrine had sent money to the complainant to purchase Plan B, an over-the counter, morning-after contraception pill.

Baumgartner also asserted that the complainant had sought the rape kit because she was bleeding in the hours following the encounter. In addition, Baumgartner said Edrine had grabbed her jacket during the encounter to keep her from leaving, ripping it in the process. The defense claimed he was attempting to be playful.

Afterward, the complainant filed a report with her hometown police department to receive the rape kit as well, as one with Albemarle County Police, who searched Edrine’s apartment within 24 hours of the encounter. But the complainant later asked ACPD to not pursue the charges, with Baumgartner reading a text from the complainant in which she told Edrine she had dropped the charges because she “cared” about him.

She later asked Edrine how much money he had sent to so she could send it back, and Edrine at one point said in a text message to her that the encounter was, “her dream come true.”

With the new evidence submitted, the court asked if the defense could submit the full messages sent from Edrine. Those are to be reviewed by Friday at 3 p.m., and will either be sealed or become public after a review to remove any personal information about the complainant.

Edrine’s defense attorney, Rhonda Quagliana, stuck largely to the arguments laid out in the memorandum, playing a recording of a call between the complainant and an ACPD detective which Quagliana believed took place between Aug. 25-28. In the call, the complainant can be heard telling the detective, “I don’t believe that was rape at all,” to which the detective asked to confirm and later said he did not believe the events she had told him constituted rape, either. The detective ultimately offered to complete the investigation but not pursue charges.

Quagliana also read a number of messages between Edrine and the complainant that occurred in the weeks after, with the defense arguing most of the exchanges were initiated by the complainant. In the messages, the complainant asked about going to one of Edine’s football games, and insisted she was pregnant with his child.

“The texts are clear and make it clear what’s going on,” Quagliana said.

She ultimately argued Edrine should have the opportunity to be released on bond due to his lack of a criminal record, his choice to turn himself in upon learning he was being charged and there being no indications that he is a danger to himself or others or that he is a flight risk.

Edrine enrolled at UVA in January after transferring from Purdue. He had 46 receptions for 564 yards and a touchdown for UVA last season and was set to return as the Wahoo’s presumptive first option at receiver. He is no longer enrolled at the university.