A federal lawsuit filed in the Southern District of Florida on Tuesday alleges Brown sexually assaulted trainer Britney Taylor on three occasions.
The lawsuit states the first incident occurred in 2017, saying Brown "exposed himself and kissed Ms. Taylor without her consent." Later that month, the lawsuit cites another incident where Brown allegedly masturbated "near her without her knowledge and ejaculated on her back" while the two were watching a church service on her iPad.
The suit says Brown was "begging forgiveness and pleading with her to train him again" after the incident. Taylor said she eventually agreed although she was "hesitant."
Nearly a year later, the lawsuit says Brown "cornered Ms. Taylor, forced her down onto a bed, pushed her face into the mattress, and forcibly raped her."
In a statement from his attorney Darren Heitner, Brown denied "each and every allegation in the lawsuit" and called it a "money grab."
Brown said Taylor cut off communication with him after he rejected an investment proposition of $1.6 million. In the statement, Brown said Taylor then "engaged" Brown and pursued a "consensual personal relationship."
The Patriots released a statement, saying that the team "takes these allegations very seriously." The NFL is also planning to investigate the accusations. The league is also expected to "give serious consideration" to placing Brown on the commissioner's exempt list, according to the Washington Post's Mark Maske.
Read more: New lawsuit accuses Antonio Brown of raping his fitness trainer