The woman was 17 at the time of her encounter with the rocker in New York City

A second woman has alleged that Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler sexually assaulted her when she was a teenager decades ago. Last week, Jeanne Bellino filed a lawsuit for sexual assault under New York City’s Gender-Motivated Violence Act, nearing the end of the statute of limitations of 50 years. Bellino alleges that the incident happened “in approximately 1975 when she was approximately 17 years old” and Tyler was 27.

Bellino accuses the rocker of “mauling and groping,” “humping” and “pretending to have sex with” her in New York City when she was a child fashion model, according to NBC News. The suit claims “Tyler stuck his tongue down her throat, and put his hands upon her body, her breasts, her buttocks, and her genitals, moving and removing clothing and pinning her against the wall” of a phone booth they stopped while walking to a hotel with an entourage of people.

Tyler then “inserted his tongue” into her mouth “without her consent,” and his “penis was erect and it was evident to her as he rubbed it against her that he was not wearing underwear and wearing thin pants,” according to the lawsuit.

Bellino alleges that Tyler restrained her as she struggled, but she was eventually able to break free after freeing her right arm, grabbing the back of his head, and raising her knee at him.

The suit then alleges that Tyler pinned her against a wall of a hotel bar, and simulating sex while putting his tongue down her throat. She claims no one interfered either time.

Bellino is asking for an “amount that will fully and fairly compensate” her for her injuries and damages. She’s seeking restitution for permanent emotional and physical distress as she was hospitalized and medicated because of the assault.

Tyler has yet to comment on the second suit.

In December of last year, Julia Holcomb, who has been public about her experience with Tyler in the past, sued the rocker for sexual assault, sexual battery, and intentional infliction of emotional distress with a minor during the 1970s. Holcomb alleges that the rocker, who was 25 at the time, convinced her mother to grant him guardianship over her when she was 16, which allowed her to travel with him legally, and led to an illicit relationship with him.

In March, he filed a dismissal of that suit, claiming Holcomb, is not entitled to any damages because she did not “sustained any injury or loss by reason of any act or omission on the part of (Tyler).”