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Logan • Friday is the third and last day scheduled for the preliminary hearing for former Utah State University linebacker Torrey Green, 23, who has been charged in seven sexual assaults that allegedly occurred between November 2013 and November 2015, while Green was a student.

The charges were filed after a Salt Lake Tribune story in July prompted Cache County prosecutors to re-examine sexual assault allegations lodged against Green in 2015. Since July, prosecutors have investigated at least 15 sexual assault allegations against Green. He has been charged in 1st District Court with six counts of rape, one count of aggravated kidnapping, three counts of forcible sex abuse and two counts of object rape.

Three alleged victims testified Wednesday, and two testified Thursday. Two more alleged victims are expected to testify Friday.

See developments from the day's testimony here:

12:10 p.m.

Closing arguments for Torrey Green's preliminary hearings are set for April 19 at 9 a.m., which is when Judge Brian Cannell will decide if there is probable cause to advance the cases to trial.

11:35 a.m.

Kendra, Debbie's best friend and roommate, told the court Friday that Debbie was fairly intoxicated at the November 2015 party at which Debbie says she was raped.

She detailed a similar story as Kylee: how Debbie came out of Torrey Green's bedroom in tears, how she just kept saying she told him, no. Kendra said Green did try to get into the bathroom they were in, but was asking about another friend of theirs, who was throwing up from drinking too much.

The morning after the alleged rape, Kendra said, she, Kylee and another friend told Debbie she needed to go to the hospital for a sexual assault examination.

They said to Debbie "if this really did happen, you need to go to the hospital," Kendra said. "She was really distraught, she didn't want to go, but we knew she needed to."

Kendra said Debbie spoke with a police officer about what happened when they went to the hospital, but said at that time that she didn't want to press any charges.

Callie Peacock, a sexual assault examination nurse, testified Friday that she conducted an examination of Debbie following the alleged assault. She said she did not find any injuries.

(Editor's note: The Tribune is using only Kendra and Kylee's first names to protect Debbie's identity.)

11:25 a.m.

Kylee, Debbie's friend, said she remembers Debbie coming out of Torrey Green's bedroom that November 2015 night in tears.

They went into a bathroom, Kylee told the court Friday, and Debbie said, "I kept saying, no, I really need you to believe me. I want to leave."

"She was sad and scared, she was crying," Kylee said.

Kylee left the bathroom to get another friend water, she said, and ran into a woman at the party. That woman asked if she was OK, Kylee said, and she said, no, telling the woman she should go home.

Then she ran into a football player, Kylee said, who also asked if everything was OK.

"I said, no, I didn't give any details, I just said something happened with Torrey that wasn't OK and I need to get my friends out of here," Kylee said.

The football player came in the bathroom with them, Kylee said, and then Torrey began knocking on the door, yelling about what Kylee said to the woman.

Somehow the door got opened, Kylee said, but the football player in the bathroom with them closed it again.

The football player eventually got them out of the apartment, Kylee said, and took them back to Debbie's apartment.

(Editor's note: The Tribune is using only Kylee's first name to protect Debbie's identity.)

10:55 a.m.

The November 2015 night that Debbie says she was raped by Torrey Green, she called her best friend from home and told her that she had been assaulted.

"I didn't want to use the other word," Debbie told the court Friday, in tears.

That night was just the third occasion on which Debbie had spent time with Green, she said, and he previously had been pushy.

But the night of the alleged attack, she said, she was put at ease because it appeared that Green had a girl with him.

When his date was not in the room, however, Debbie said, Green would approach her, trying to kiss her.

"I told him I was hanging out with friends and I wasn't here for that, I wasn't interested," Debbie said.

As the night wore on, Debbie said she got more and more intoxicated. She eventually decided to go into Green's room to kiss him, she said, even though her friend warned her not to.

As they were kissing, Debbie said, Green began grabbing her buttocks and trying to take her pants off. She told him no, she said, but he didn't respond.

She tried to leave the room, she said, but the door was locked and she couldn't figure out how to unlock it.

Green then began trying to "convince" her to have sex with him, Debbie said, telling her "just for a second, let me just put it in for a second."

Debbie told him no, she said, and the next thing she can remember is being in a lot of pain as Green raped her.

Green stopped when someone began pounding on the door, she said, and Debbie ran out of the bedroom to find her friends.

They locked themselves in a bathroom, she said, and called another football player to come pick them up.

When they returned to Debbie's apartment, she said, she called her friend from home who told her to go to the hospital. She didn't want to, she said.

The next day, Debbie said she went to work. But she was still in a lot of pain, she said, and she was crying a lot.

So, that night, Debbie went to get a sexual assault examination done, she said, and reported to police.

(Editor's note: Debbie is identified in court documents as "R.E.", but agreed to be identified by the pseudonym, Debbie, in previous Tribune reporting.)

10:25 a.m.

C.H. used to be dedicated to her school work and tried to make friends, said Alexandra, C.H.'s sorority sister, in a video recorded interview played in court on Friday.

But after the alleged attack by Torrey Green in August 2015, Alexandra said, C.H. struggled to do both — and started to withdraw from their sorority.

C.H. told her about the alleged attack during the fall semester of 2015, Alexandra said, but she can't remember the details of what C.H. said.

Alexandra also can't remember if C.H. told her "a football player" allegedly assaulted her, or if C.H. identified Green by name.

(Editor's note: The Tribune is using only Alexandra's first name to protect C.H.'s identity.)

9:50 a.m.

C.H. was a sophomore at Utah State University in August 2015, she said, when she met Torrey Green on Tinder, the dating app.

A few days later, Green wanted C.H. to come to his apartment, she told the court on Friday, but C.H. told him she would feel more comfortable meeting in a public place.

So they went to Aggie Ice Cream, she said, and talked about his family.

"He seemed very talkative and approachable, like a normal guy," C.H. said.

About 30 minutes later, C.H. said, they went back to his apartment. Green told her he didn't have any roommates, she said, which made her a little nervous.

They started watching a scary movie, she said, and he placed her hand in his lap. She pulled it away, she said, and eventually they began to kiss — which she consented to.

He began to put his hand up her shirt and down her pants, she said, and she kept telling him she wasn't comfortable with it.

"I was pulling away, pushing his body away from mine," she told the court. "I told him, I was saying things like 'I don't want this. Please stop.' "

He then began raping her, she said, until she was able to push him away.

Afterward, she said, Green told her, "You wouldn't be the type of girl who would report this would you? I've got a lot of friends who got put away for much less than this."

She told him no, she said, and went home and cried herself to sleep.

She didn't report the alleged attack to police, she said, because she "was afraid of what would happen if I did."

She did, however, tell a friend about the episode in late 2015 or early 2016, she said, well before The Salt Lake Tribune's story was published in July.

She decided to report to police after the Tribune story ran, she said, because she "realized that I wanted to make the cases stronger because I knew that my case was similar to theirs. That I wasn't the only person involved."

In the middle of cross-examination by Rhiannon Mann, one of Green's attorney's, C.H. requested a break. The court is currently in recess.