Trevor Bauer's 27-minute phone call with accuser following sexual encounter revealed

A phone call between former Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Trevor Bauer and his accuser, Lindsey Hill, about their sexual encounter was released on YouTube Thursday.

The two settled their legal dispute earlier this week, and the pitcher released damning messages from Hill to her friends.

A friend told Hill to "secure the bag" after seeing Bauer's net worth was $51 million. Hill also called a "star pitcher for the for the Dodgers" her "next victim."

The two begin the May 22, 2021, phone call with Hill congratulating Bauer on his 11-strikeout performance from the night before. The YouTube description says the call was "covertly recorded by police" as two officers sat next to Hill during the discussion.

Bauer asks how Hill was feeling, and she said she was having a "tough time" and was "trying to process how it even happened."

The two seem confused as to how Hill's facial injuries came about. Bauer said Hill "asked" him to "hit" her, and the two discussed a "safe word."

"I would never do that to you outside of what we had talked about," Bauer says.

Hill said the encounter was "blurry" for her as she was going "in and out of consciousness."

"So, I did ask you to hit me?" Hill asks.

"Yeah," Bauer responded.

Hill said she was in "a lot of pain" and didn't recall asking Bauer to hit her. Bauer said he didn't "feel like I hit you that hard."

"I tried telling you multiple times, ‘Do you want to stop? Are you OK?’ And you said to keep going. So, I just was trying to follow your lead on it," Bauer said. "That was never the point of it."

In the call, Hill explained she had "two black eyes and a swollen jaw" and was in the hospital. She later said she had a concussion. 

When she asked Bauer what they talked about "beforehand in terms of boundaries," Bauer said she said "something about slapping in the face." 

"We talked about, like, how you kind of, how you felt like going out and like coming back, and you had said that you want to do it again because you felt good. Like it made you feel good," Bauer told Hill.

"I'll never cross boundaries with you."

Hill said she "never said it was a free for all … the punching … and all the stuff that resulted in me being in the hospital." Bauer replied by saying he asked her "multiple times" if she was OK, which was his way of checking he wasn't "crossing any boundaries."

Hill says she eventually said "the safe word" because she was in "so much pain when you were hitting the top of my ." Later, she says, she "didn't want" punching.

"I never thought that that's what it was gonna be, you know? Because we just hadn't like talked about that," Hill says.

"I understand that, for sure…" Bauer replies, later adding there was a "miscommunication." "That was not my intent."

Hill then says she knew "nothing about rough sex" and asks Bauer how "could you think that's OK."

"I was under the impression that you had, like, had rough sex before because you had said that, that it's like kind of your way of escaping," Bauer says. "So … I should've clarified that and talked to you more about it and really got on the same page with you about that."

Bauer later said Hill told him that "fingers down the throat" was off limits. Hill said she didn't remember Bauer asking her if she was OK throughout the encounter.

The pitcher's attorneys said the following in a statement, obtained by Fox News Digital:

“Trevor Bauer and Lindsey Hill had consensual rough sex and the pretext call confirms that his version of events — the truth — never wavered, despite her attempts to get him to admit what she told the police…

“If Mr. Bauer had committed the acts alleged and this call was the smoking gun Ms. Hill hoped it would be, the Pasadena Police Department — who coordinated the call — would have arrested him. They didn’t view this recorded call as probable cause for an arrest, or consider it to be evidence that Mr. Bauer admitted to what Ms. Hill accused him of. Rather, it was further evidence that Ms. Hill’s allegations were not credible.”

Bauer's attorneys added that he “never punched” Hill.

The 2020 AL Cy Young Award winner was initially suspended for the equivalent of two full seasons by Major League Baseball, but that was shortened to 194 games. He played the 2023 season in Japan.

"Now, over the last two years, I’ve been forced to defend my integrity and my reputation in a very public setting, but hopefully this is the last time I have to do so, as I’d prefer to just remain focused on doing my job, winning baseball games and entertaining fans around the world," he said earlier this week. "So, today I’m happy to be moving on with my life."