Austin police said Beard was booked at the Travis County jail at 4:18 a.m. Monday on a charge of assault on a family or household member in which their breath was impeded. The charge is a third-degree felony in Texas, with a possible punishment of two to 10 years in prison.
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Beard went before a magistrate judge for his bond hearing, wearing jailhouse black-and-grey stripes and his hands were cuffed in front at his waist. Beard was told he could communicate with the alleged victim but not in a threatening manner, was ordered to stay 200 yards away from the residence where police were called, and was told he is barred from possessing a firearm.
Beard nodded his head and answered "yes, sir" several times when addressing the judge. Jail records show Beard posted $10,000 bond. He didn't answer questions when he left the jail with his attorney Perry Minton.
Minton declined to comment but earlier told the Austin American-Statesman the coach is innocent of the charge.
"He should never have been arrested," Minton told the newspaper. "The complainant wants him released immediately and all charges dismissed. It is truly inconceivable."
The arrest affidavit was not immediately released. But a short narrative Austin police wrote with Beard's jail photograph said police received an emergency disturbance call shortly after midnight. The caller said the incident was over and that one of the people involved had left the house.
Responding officers located a woman who told them she'd been "assaulted and strangled" by Beard. It wasn't immediately known if she had an attorney.
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After an initial statement acknowledging Beard's arrest, the university decided to suspend him as night fell Monday.
"The University takes matters of interpersonal violence involving members of its community seriously. Given the information available, The University has suspended Chris Beard from his position as head coach of Men's Basketball and will withhold his pay until further notice. Associate Head Coach Rodney Terry will serve as acting head coach for tonight's game against Rice," Scott McConnell, UT's assistant athletics director of communications, wrote.
The seventh-ranked Longhorns (7-1) host Rice on Monday night. They were ranked No. 2 a week ago, the program's highest ranking in more than a decade.
Beard is in his second season of a seven-year guaranteed contract that pays him more than $5 million per year. Before that, he was 112-55 in five seasons with the Red Raiders. He was named The Associated Press coach of the year in 2019 as he guided Texas Tech to a 31-7 finish and lost in an overtime thriller to Virginia in the national championship game.
His departure for Texas - a deal reached after a meeting with Texas athletic director Chris Del Conte that included a McDonald's breakfast an hour's drive north of Lubbock - left Texas Tech officials frustrated.
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Beard said it was a difficult move, but he could not turn down a chance to coach at his alma mater, where he was a student assistant three decades ago. Earlier this year, he led Texas to a first-round victory over Virginia Tech that was the Longhorns' first NCAA Tournament win since 2014.
Beard's contract includes a provision under which he can be fired for cause for conduct the administration reasonably determines reflects poorly on the coach, program, school or university system. That includes being charged with a felony. University of Texas System Board of Regents Chairman Kevin Eltife did not return a message seeking comment.
If Beard is suspended, Longhorns associate head coach Rodney Terry would be a likely candidate to lead the team. Terry has been a head coach at UTEP (2018-21) and Fresno State (2011-18).
Texas freshman guard Arterio Morris faces a misdemeanor family violence charge stemming from a June arrest after an incident with a former girlfriend. He faces a Wednesday court hearing in Denton County near Dallas.
Morris, a top national recruit, has been allowed to play this season despite the charge, and averages 17 minutes and 6.5 points per game. Morris' attorney, Justin Moore, has said Moore is innocent of the assault charge.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.