Michigan State defensive end Demetrius Cooper's order to show cause has been dismissed, and he will continue under the bond conditions put into place in March, according to 54-B District Court documents.

Cooper's bond was set into place when a plea agreement was filed March 16 as part of a misdemeanor assault and battery case. Cooper was accused of spitting on a PACE parking officer on Oct. 30 and a warrant was issued on Nov. 28. If he met the conditions of the bond, which include not possessing or consuming alcohol through next November, Cooper's charge would have been dropped to littering with a $500 fine.

However, an order to show cause was generated April 27 saying Cooper was found to have violated his bond by possessing or consuming alcohol on or about April 21. With that, Cooper could have been found in criminal contempt of court for violating bond and was scheduled to appear in court for a hearing on Thursday.

On Tuesday, though, Cooper's attorney, Jim Heos, went on The Drive with Jack on the Team 92.1FM and said "the matter has been resolved," and the bond conditions remain with one caveat: Cooper has to submit more testing than he would have under the original agreement.

Court documents reflect what Heos said and add that Cooper will face daily alcohol testing between 5 a.m. and 9 a.m.

Listen: Demetrius Cooper's attorney on The Drive With Jack

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Videos surfaced on Twitter on April 21 showing Cooper drinking from a bottle of liquor and a photo of Cooper holding two bottles of liquor. But Heos said the visual of Cooper drinking was from February, before the bond conditions were set. As for the photo, Heos said that Cooper walked onto a party bus in April, saw the two bottles and picked them up, had his photo taken and put them down. He added that he had three witnesses lined up for Thursday who would testify Cooper drank only cranberry juice that night, and also said all of Cooper's previous alcohol tests had come back negative.

Heos, who emphasized that the original incident did not involve alcohol, the city attorney and Judge Richard D. Ball came to the agreement that Cooper's bond would be amended to include more testing.

Cooper started 11 games as a junior, recording 23 tackles, six for loss, and 2.5 sacks. He did not participate in the spring game, but Heos said that was because of an injury.

"My understanding is he had a cyst removed from his knee by surgery," Heos said. "I don't know if he's recovering from it now, but that's why he was held out of spring football."

The MSU program has not announced any changes to Cooper's status with the team. He has been projected to be among the players competing for a starting job next season on the defensive line.

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