The rapper claims the Jane Doe accuser's story has too many inaccuracies and is also seeking action against her lawyer Tony Buzbee.
JAY-Z and his legal team are moving to dismiss a lawsuit that accuses him of raping a teenage girl. According to Rolling Stone, the rapper, legal name Shawn Carter, filed a motion on Wednesday (Jan. 8) pointing out impossibilities and inconsistencies in the Jane Doe accuser’s story of the night of the 2000 Video Music Awards.
The Brooklyn rapper cites an interview Doe shared last month where she admitted to inaccuracies in her story, admitting “I have made some mistakes… I just hope I can give others the strength to come forward like I came forward.”
In the new motion, the 55-year-old’s attorney Alex Spiro also moves to place a monetary sanction on the woman’s lawyer Tony Buzbee, claiming he moved forward with the claim without looking into its validity.
“To sign a pleading accusing someone of such a horrific crime without adequately vetting the allegation — particularly when the defendant’s prominence means that the allegation will be repeated in headlines across the world — is deeply wrong and unethical,” explained Spiro. “If lawyers do not face consequences for such a cavalier effort to destroy another person’s reputation and inflict emotional harm on his loved ones, that tactic will proliferate.”
Still, Buzbee stands firm, asserting to RS, that he refuses to be “bullied or intimidated.”
“Mr. Spiro and his firm are paid by the hour. So, they file a lot of junk with the Court,” he said. “With each frantic filing, his team reeks of desperation. He and his team think the laws and rules don’t apply to them. They are flat wrong. They also think they can bully or intimidate counsel for victims by filing meritless and frivolous pleadings full of lies and half-truths. Again, they are dead wrong… We will address the utter lack of merit with his filing with the Court, rather than with the press.”
The lawsuit was initially filed in October 2024 as a part of the Victims of Gender-Motivated Violence Protection Act in the Southern District of New York in October, where it only included disgraced mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs but was amended in December to include JAY-Z.
“Mr. Carter has nothing to do with Mr. Combs’ case, or Mr. Combs,” detailed Spiro.
“They knew each other professionally for a number of years. Just like in all professions, people know each other. At a music awards, they support each other. You go to the NBA All-Star game, they support each other. That’s just how professions work. There is no closer association between any of them. That’s also a matter of fiction. That’s all that there is, he doesn’t know anything about the charges or allegations against [Combs], he has nothing to do with that case. And there’s nothing more to say.”
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