Former Texas Christian University and Seattle Seahawks quarterback Trevone Boykin has been indicted on a felony charge after his girlfriend said he broke her jaw earlier this year and police reported video evidence of an assault.

Trevone Boykin (Mansfield Police Department)

A Tarrant County grand jury handed down the indictment Friday on a charge of aggravated assault causing serious bodily injury.

Boykin, 25, has previously denied the allegations.

Shabrika Bailey said she was at Boykin's Mansfield home March 20 when they began arguing after she refused to show him a text message she had received.

"I remember him choking me, and I'm trying to calm him down," she told WFAA-TV (Channel 8). "And I just couldn't. And I blacked out."

She said that when she came to, she was "in a puddle of blood on the kitchen floor." Boykin attempted to clean her up before taking her to a hospital, where she spent several days with a broken jaw, she said.

When Mansfield police went to Boykin's home in search of evidence, they found cameras hooked up to a recording device. Footage on the device revealed "what appeared to be an assault that occurred inside the residence," police said.

Boykin was arrested and has since posted $25,000 bond.

He told the NFL Network's Ian Rapoport in a statement that Bailey's story wasn't true.

"This woman has lied about me, and it has cost me my job," Boykin said. "I know guilt by association is real. This person has fabricated a story, and I am suffering the consequences. I will let the legal system run its course and I know I will be vindicated."

A statement from former #Seahawks QB Trevone Boykin on the incident that led to his release: “I want to be clear that the story is false.” pic.twitter.com/PnIUps9sIg — Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) March 27, 2018

The Seattle Seahawks released Boykin a short time after his arrest, without giving a reason.

Boykin was on probation when a car he was riding in plowed into an Uptown bar in March 2017, injuring eight people. He was arrested on charges of marijuana possession and public intoxication, but the case was dismissed in January.

Bailey, who was driving the car and pleaded guilty to intoxication assault, told WFAA that Boykin caused the crash by choking her and that she had been covering up for him.