(06-12) 13:11 PDT SAN FRANCISCO -- Florida authorities will not file charges against 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick, his teammate Quinton Patton or the Seattle Seahawks' Ricardo Lockette in connection with an incident that took place in Kaepernick's Miami apartment in April, officials said Thursday.

Police investigated the case after a 25-year-old woman from Georgia reported that she had blacked out after drinking and smoking marijuana while in the company of the players, and had awakened in a hospital. The players were doing offseason training in Florida.

In an 8-page report released Thursday, the Miami-Dade Office of the State Attorney said the woman had been the subject of a psychiatric hold after her visit with the players and concluded, "There is no evidence to indicate that she was the victim of any crime." The office reported finding no evidence the woman was assaulted or drugged, beyond her use of marijuana.

Kaepernick responded to the report Thursday on Twitter, writing, "As I said from day one, I would never do the things that were made up about me. I'm glad this issue is resolved. It's time for football."

Last week, Kaepernick signed a six-year, $126-million contract extension with the 49ers, highlighting the franchise's faith in the young quarterback's future with the team.

Thursday's report sheds light on the incident, laying out new details of the probe from police and witnesses accounts.

The woman told police she visited the men on the night of April 1 at an apartment in the Viceroy, a downtown luxury hotel that has guest rooms and residences. After drinking alcohol and smoking marijuana from a bong with the group, the woman said, she got naked in a bedroom and kissed Kaepernick before he left the room - and she blacked out. She reported on April 3 that she "may have been sexually assaulted."

According to an attorney for the players, Kaepernick first met the woman in early 2013 at a club in Atlanta and had sex with her, either that night or within a couple of days. But Kaepernick soon stopped talking to her, and changed his phone number, after she told him she was pregnant on April Fools Day, the lawyer said.

The woman continued trying to contact Kaepernick on social media, but he did not respond, the attorney said. At one point, the woman posted a topless video online in which she was covered with body paint resembling Kaepernick's jersey.

The woman later began to communicate with Lockette, the attorney said, and learned through him that Kaepernick would be in Miami. The woman, in a statement to police, said she took a Greyhound bus to Miami and arrived on April 1, before going to the apartment and hanging out with the players.

Kaepernick's attorney suggested he had very little interaction that night with the woman, who reportedly removed her clothes, wrapped herself in a comforter and issued a veiled threat to other women who were there with Kaepernick. The quarterback took off, but continued texting Lockette, who called police after the woman refused to leave, the attorney said.

Miami police officers reported finding the woman writhing naked on the bed and "screaming incoherently about Jesus and devils," before throwing her wig at the officers.

Police called for backup to deal with the woman. Firefighters showed up to calm the woman down but couldn't, and had to restrain her and give her a shot of medication to subdue her, the state attorney's report states. She was admitted to a hospital under Florida's Baker Act, which allows people to be held temporarily if authorities believe they are a danger to themselves or others.