Portland mayoral candidate Jefferson Smith on Tuesday released

with the unnamed woman with whom he fought in a 1993 off-campus party. Smith was 20 and then a student at the University of Oregon.

The disclosure comes a day after

at a news conference to release the documents, and it follows a formal request for the records by The Oregonian on Tuesday.

Monday, Smith suggested the record had been lost in a storage-unit fire but said he would consider releasing it if he could locate a copy.

Tuesday, his campaign released two pages of records. However, the campaign redacted the name of the woman involved in the scuffle. Neither Eugene Municipal Court nor Eugene Police had records of the 19-year-old event or, as a result, the woman's name.

The report -- a diversion agreement between Smith and the Eugene Municipal Court -- shows the woman did receive stitches. On Monday, Smith said he didn't know what type of medical care her injury required.

The report also shows:

Smith agreed to "conduct himself as a peaceful law abiding citizen throughout the six-month term" of the diversion.

That Smith agreed "his conduct at the time alleged in the accusatory instrument on file herein was wrongful; however, this admission is not intended by any party to this agreement as an admission of criminal wrongdoing by the defendant."

That Smith agreed not to have contact with the woman.

That he paid $250 in court costs.

That he agreed to pay the woman's medical expenses, which included an emergency-room visit and the removal of stitches.

And that Smith had to perform 20 hours of community service by July 1, 1994.

The agreement is dated March 2, 1994.

--