Police arrested former Ohio State football player James Redmond early Wednesday morning on charges of assault, damaging property and using a false ID.This is his third arrest in the past year and the second this quarter.”Apparently he broke into his ex-girlfriend’s place,” said Sgt. Earl Smith, Columbus Division of Police spokesman.Redmond was arrested at 5882 Garden Grove Blvd., the home of his ex-girlfriend, Smith said.Arrest warrants indicate that Ruchee Sachdeva was grabbed and thrown to the ground, scraping the side of her nose. She could not be reached for comment on Wednesday.Reports also indicate that Redmond punched and kicked holes in the walls and a closet door of Sachdeva’s apartment.When he was arrested Redmond reportedly gave police a fake ID that displayed his picture with false information.Smith said police are looking into a possible burglary in the incident.A neighbor who declined to give her name said two guys were arguing.”It was loud,” she said.Smith said apparently Redmond fought with Kenyon Rambo, an OSU football wide receiver.Smith said Redmond likely will be arraigned today.All of the charges against Redmond are first-degree misdemeanors, which carry a penalty of up to six months in jail and/or a maximum $1,000 fine per charge.Gerald Emig, spokesman for the Department of Athletics, said the department is looking into the situation. “We haven’t talked to Jimmy yet,” he said.Redmond was unavailable for comment on Wednesday.Redmond was arrested Jan. 20 on four criminal charges, including menacing, operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated, operating a vehicle while under suspension and reckless operation of a motor vehicle after an incident with an OSU Transportation and Parking officer. A police report from that incident indicated that Redmond attempted to assault the officer while trying to flee as the officer attempted to pull him over. He pleaded not guilty to all four charges at his arraignment, and the case is slated to go to trial later this month. Redmond’s lawyer, W. Jeffrey Moore, said in January that he didn’t anticipate Redmond being found guilty of the Jan. 20 charges. He said that he believed the charges had been “trumped up.” On Aug. 17, Redmond pleaded no contest to a minor misdemeanor charge of disorderly conduct. In that incident he reportedly chased down and trapped an OSU Transportation and Parking officer with the car he was driving behind Blankenship Hall. The officer had just placed an impound warning on the car that, according to Transportation and Parking records, had $100 of unpaid parking tickets.After the January arrest, Redmond was dismissed from the football team. He then joined the track team and entered a drug and alcohol counseling program through the athletics department.The program includes testing and counseling, said Andy Geiger, director of athletics, at the time of last month’s arrest.Geiger could not be reached for comment on the latest incident.