More than 50 audio and video recordings released Wednesday by the GBI reveal new details about what allegedly happened in the bathroom of a Milledgeville bar between Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger and the college sophomore who accused him of rape.

Roethlisberger has denied the accusations and will not face criminal charges in the March 5 incident.

"I noticed throughout the night he kind of had like a short temper," the 20-year-old told police in the second of two interviews. That interview, captured on video, contains information never before released to the public.

His temper kept her from trying harder to stop him,  she said, though she insists she was clear in rebuffing Roethlisberger's advances.

"He said it’s really okay. I said I really don’t think it’s okay,” the accuser told law enforcement in the first interview, which was conducted within an hour of the alleged rape. Her voice was shaky but she was cogent, though she acknowledged she was drunk.

"He said no it is," she recalled, portraying Roethlisberger as emotionally detached and abrupt during the 2-minute encounter. "And then he left. He left. I was just sitting there in the bathroom."

"I don't know what I can do," she said. "I'm a little girl and he's a big boy."

The alleged victim contradicted claims by Roethlisberger's camp that the sex didn't involve penetration.

"When you say sex, what in this case does it mean to you?" Milledgeville police officer Jason Lopez asked in the first interview.

"There was definitely vaginal penetration," the woman replied. She said Roethlisberger did not use a condom.

The audio and video files were obtained by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and other media outlets through Georgia's Open Records Act. The AJC does not identify alleged victims of sexual abuse.

Georgia College and State University student Nicole Biancofiore told police that Roethlisberger took advantage of her friend: "He knew how drunk she was."

After the incident the victim wanted to go home, Biancofiore said, but her friends instead flagged down a police officer outside the Capital City Club.

Other witnesses portray Roethlisberger, wearing a T-shirt featuring a Mephisto-like character, as something of a diva.

"When I first saw Ben, he said a comment that I didn’t like," Capital City Club bartender Aimee Adams told police. "He said, ‘go get another bartender,' and [I said] there’s not that many people back here, I [can] clearly handle it."

Roethlisberger was insistent, Adams said: "So I was like, OK. That was that, and it ticked me off."

Capital City owner Rocky Duncan met the quarterback's request, closing off the VIP area for Roethlisberger and his friends.

"There were about 25 people back there, eight to nine of them [in Rothlisberger’s crew]. The rest were girls," Duncan told police.

Duncan said one of Roethlisberger's "bouncers" requested a private bathroom "to try and beat the crowd."

"They weren’t very sociable people," Duncan told police. "I tried to talk to them, ask them where they were from, but then just kind of stepped back."

Edward Joyner, a Pennsylvania state police officer, told police that Roethlisberger was shocked when he learned of the rape accusation.

"He said, ‘What is she saying? There’s no way that could have happened. There’s no way that that could have happened," Joyner said.

Milledgeville police officer Jerry Clay, who accompanied Sgt. Jerry Blash to the Capital City Club to interview Roethlisberger, said the quarterback was dismissive of his alleged victim.

"[Rothlisberger] said she probably started it because he wouldn’t give her the time of day, basically," Clay told a GBI agent. "[Roethlisberger] said she was rude to him so he kind of ignored her throughout the night. I can’t tell what he felt, but it seemed like he felt like she was the one who instigated it because she wasn’t given the time of day."

Roethlisberger has since been suspended by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell for six games for violating the league's personal conduct policy. He also faces a civil suit filed by a Nevada waitress who claims the quarterback sexually assaulted her in 2008.

Blash was forced to resign after it was revealed he did not take the accuser's claim seriously.

--Staff writers Kristi E. Swartz, Alexis Stevens, Chelsea Cook and Raisa Habersham contributed to this report.

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