Deshaun Watson, the star quarterback of the Houston Texans, has been accused of sexually assaulting three massage therapists last year in three separate civil suits filed this week in Harris County, Texas.
In the third complaint, filed late Wednesday, a woman accused Watson, 25, of pressuring her to perform oral sex during a massage on Dec. 28 at an office building in Houston. Watson, who contacted the woman through a direct message on Instagram, grew increasingly forceful during the massage, the complaint said, and told her to work on his hamstrings, inner thighs and “inner glutes.”
The complaint echoed behavior detailed in the two suits filed against Watson earlier this week. The first complaint, filed late Tuesday, a woman accused Watson of accosting her and pressuring her to have sex with him during a massage at her home in Houston. Watson denied the accusation in a statement posted to his Twitter account Tuesday night.
According to the first complaint, on March 30, 2020, Watson went to the woman’s home and, once on the massage table wearing only a small towel, instructed the woman to focus on his groin. Watson, according to the complaint, “moved his body so he could expose himself more.”
The woman ended the massage abruptly and asked him to leave, the complaint said. She claimed that Watson had suggested that he could ruin her reputation if she tried to ruin his by speaking publicly about the encounter.
Watson later sent a text message to the woman to apologize, according to the complaint. She did not respond.
On Wednesday, he was accused in a second complaint, by another woman who said that he pressured her to have sex with him during a massage last year.
In a statement posted to Twitter on Tuesday night, Watson said that he “never treated any woman with anything other than the utmost respect” and that he looked forward to clearing his name. Watson also said that he had rejected “a baseless six-figure settlement demand” made before the accuser’s lawyer filed the lawsuit.
Watson has hired Rusty Hardin, a prominent defense attorney also based in Houston. Hardin has defended other well known athletes, including Roger Clemens and James Harden.
According to the second complaint, Watson contacted a massage therapist in Atlanta in annd agreed to pay to fly the woman to Houston, where they met at The Houstonian Hotel in a suite he had reserved, the complaint said.
The complaint asserts that Watson immediately disrobed and the woman asked him to cover himself. When Watson became increasingly suggestive, urging the massage therapist to perform sexual acts, the complaint said, she stopped the massage and Watson grabbed her. The woman left the room and went directly to the airport, according to the complaint, and Watson paid her for the massage but did not reimburse her for her flights.
Several months later, when Watson was in Atlanta he is said to have contacted the woman again to ask if she was available, according to the complaint. She did not respond.
The third suit alleged that Watson then instructed her to move her hand across his genitals and pushed her mouth toward his penis. The woman was so shaken that she blacked out for a few minutes. Watson got dressed and left without apologizing.
The accusers seek “minimal compensatory damages,” according to the complaints. After submitting the first filing on Tuesday, Tony Buzbee, a high-profile and flamboyant plaintiffs lawyer in Houston who is representing all three accusers, wrote on Instagram that the case was not about money but about “stopping behavior that should be stopped.”
Buzbee, who unsuccessfully ran for mayor of Houston in 2019, did not describe the accusations against Watson in that Instagram post, but he separately told a Houston television reporter on Tuesday that “Watson went too far” with the first accuser.
The Texans said in a statement that they became aware of a lawsuit involving Watson through social media on Tuesday night. “This is the first time we heard of the matter, and we hope to learn more soon.”
“The N.F.L. is aware of the reports and will decline further comment at this time,” Brian McCarthy, an N.F.L. spokesman, said Wednesday.
Watson is one of the league’s best and most recognizable players, who during a 2020 off-season of social and political turmoil called for racial justice in a player-led video that urged the N.F.L. to support players’ protests. In early June, about a week after the police in Minneapolis killed George Floyd, Watson marched with the family of Floyd — who grew up in Houston — to protest police brutality.
The sexual assault accusations come as Watson faces an uncertain future in Houston. In September, he signed a four-year extension to stretch his contract through 2025, but he has now requested a trade, vowing never to play for the Texans again. The team went 4-12 in 2020, with Watson throwing for the most yardage and touchdown passes of his career, even as the franchise replaced its head coach and general manager and cut ties with popular players.
Texans executives stressed in January that they had no intention of dealing Watson, who, with a no-trade clause, can influence where he next plays. David Culley, who was hired as the Texans’ coach this off-season, told reporters in Houston last Thursday that the Texans were “very committed” to Watson, but he also said during a March 11 podcast interview that Watson is “our starting quarterback as of right now,” a quotation suggesting his status with the team might change. On Tuesday, the Texans prepared for that possibility, if not likelihood, by agreeing to sign the veteran free-agent quarterback Tyrod Taylor.