CLEVELAND, Ohio — Cellphone video obtained by TMZ shows suspended Cleveland Browns running back Kareem Hunt being questioned by Cleveland police officers outside a downtown Cleveland bar.

Hunt was not arrested and Cleveland police spokeswoman Sgt. Jennifer Ciaccia said no police report, body camera video or other documentation exists related to any incident involving Hunt.

The incident happened sometime late Saturday outside the Barley House on West 6th Street.

Ciaccia said she would provide more information on the incident if any becomes available.

Team spokesman Peter John Baptiste said the Browns are aware of the incident and that they’ve talked to Hunt, but "we’ll have no further comment at this point.''

NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy told cleveland.com "we will decline comment.''

Barley House owner Bobby George said he saw Hunt at the bar, but that he doesn’t believe a physical altercation happened. He said he asked his staff, who told him that the incident involved an argument with one of Hunt’s friends.

TMZ Sports has video of Hunt speaking with officers. https://t.co/pydv5PCOVl — TMZ Sports (@TMZ_Sports) July 1, 2019

The Browns did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

In March, the NFL suspended Hunt for the first eight games of the season for two physical altercations over the past 17 months, including one in Cleveland. Hunt’s former team, the Kansas City Chiefs, released him in the middle of last season in the wake of one of those incidents.

Video from a February 2018 incident in Cleveland showed Hunt shoving and kicking a woman in the hallway outside of his apartment The Metropolitan at the 9. The video wasn’t released until TMZ obtained it Nov. 30.

The NFL placed Hunt on the Commissioner’s Exempt List the day TMZ released the video. The Chiefs immediately released him amid another Pro Bowl-caliber season for lying to them about the incident.

The NFL also punished Hunt for a June 2018 incident in which he is accused of punching a man at a Put-in-Bay resort.

No criminal charges have been filed against Hunt in connection with either incident.

Cleveland police launched an internal investigation into how the NFL obtained information on the incident at The Metropolitan at the 9. Ciaccia said at the time an officer gave the report to an NFL representative, allowing them to bypass the normal procedure for releasing records. That investigation is pending.

On Feb. 11, the Browns signed Hunt to a one-year deal worth up to about $1.175 million, including a base salary of $645,000, a roster bonus of $275,000, a workout bonus of $55,000 and per-game active bonuses of $25,000.

Browns GM John Dorsey, who drafted the Willoughby, Ohio native out of Toledo in the third round of the 2017 NFL Draft, said the day of the signing that Hunt would have a zero tolerance policy for further transgressions.

“We’ve done our extensive research,’’ Dorsey said in the early 25-minute interview upstairs in a conference room at the Browns’ facility with print media before another 10-minute session with electronic media in the lobby downstairs. “He’s extremely remorseful for that. I’ve always believed that if a person wants to better themselves and be a better person, I’m willing to give them a chance. I truly believe he’ll be a better man today than he was yesterday.”

On May 19, Dorsey and Kitchens surprised Hunt by showing up at his baptism at the True Vine Missionary Baptist Church in Cleveland’s Glenville neighborhood.

“We care about Kareem as a person,’’ Kitchens said May 20 at the team’s charity golf outing. “We went there for Kareem Hunt as the person and not the football player. I went to other baptisms, and I am sure John is the same way, other people’s baptisms that they don’t play football. The thing we did yesterday was not about football at all, it was about Kareem as the person.

“That’s where it’s going to start with us here. I have said that from the get-go, that’s the way I have always approached coaching even at Mississippi State or North Texas or wherever I have been. It’s always been about the person. I feel like John is the same way. We were there for Kareem Hunt, not Kareem Hunt the football player.’’

During OTAs in May, Hunt promised Dorsey that he wouldn’t let him down.

“I told (Dorsey) ‘You can trust me,’’’ he said. “I’ve got to earn his trust, and I’ve got to earn everybody’s trust in the whole organization. I’m not willing to mess that up."

In recent weeks, Hunt has visited schools such as Cleveland Heights High School to warn kids to stay out of trouble.

“Yeah, I’ve been just telling them, ‘you know you guys, you gotta make smart decisions,’" he said. “'Everybody makes mistakes and you know you just gotta make the best decision for you. When your emotions get high, just don’t react off your emotions and think about the long run.'”

Kitchens said he appreciated Hunt’s community service and other positive actions.

“I love Kareem,'' he said. "He’s putting the work in. He’s continuing to try to be the person that he wants to be and that everybody here wants him to be, and we’re going to continue to support him in every way possible.''