Randy Lee had his latest court date on Friday, and while his attorney did not deny the content of what's being alleged against the Ottawa Senators' assistant general manager, he did try to dismiss it reached the level of assault.

Lee appeared in a Buffalo court Friday, where his attorney, Paul Cambria, said what occurred between Lee and a 19-year-old shuttle driver in May did not constitute harassment.

Lee is charged with two counts of second-degree harassment, which Cambria had earlier said he would move to have dismissed, characterizing the plaintiff's suit as a "cash grab."

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In Buffalo for the NHL Combine, Lee took a shuttle from his hotel, when he allegedly made lewd comments while rubbing the shoulders of the 19-year-old driver.

Lee was suspended indefinitely by the Senators following the incident.

"There is nothing there that supports an intent to harass, annoy or harm," Cambria said in court on Friday, according to the Ottawa Citizen. “There’s no crime alleged, there’s no offense. The facts are insufficient to support the charges. It’s as simple as that.”

At no point during the proceedings did Cambria argue that what's being alleged did not happen, just that it did not constitute harassment.

But there is a secondary piece to the harassment statute in Buffalo, one that Rosanne E. Johnson, chief of the Special Victims Bureau for the Erie County district attorney’s office, said that Cambria was ignoring in his latest defense.

Johnson told the court Lee made the situation worse by continuing to rub the driver's shoulders, even after he asked Lee to stop, and also violated the portion of the harassment statute that when a person, " ... otherwise subjects the other person to physical contact.”

Judge Amy C. Martoche will levy a decision Aug. 20 on Cambria's motion to dismiss all charges.

According to the court documents, Lee also allegedly introduced himself as "Rick" and said he was a physical therapist for the team and worked in the IT department. In court on Thursday, according to the Citizen, Johnson also said that Lee instructed the driver to slow down and told him no one would see them while the incident occurred.

“It is clearly, on its face, offensive conduct,” she said.

The Senators, when announcing the suspension of Lee in mid June, said they would wait for the legal proceedings to conclude before taking any further possible action.