The long-running saga between Dillon Danis and Logan Paul’s fiancée Nina Agdal continues to weave its way through the courts after an amended complaint was filed back in October.
Agdal originally filed her lawsuit after Danis posted numerous racy photos of her online through his social media accounts as he promoted his upcoming boxing match against Paul. The non-stop barrage of posts eventually led to Agdal filing a lawsuit against Danis with her lawyers amending the complaint while detailing numerous accusations aimed at the fighter.
The allegations including numerous counts of disclosure of intimate images, invasion of privacy, defamation — including accusations that claim Danis said Agdal had HIV as well as allegedly having sex with influencers for drugs.
In the updated filing, Agdal’s attorneys argued that damages should be at least $150,000 per violation under the counts for disclosing an intimate image as well as punitive damages, attorney fees and a restraining order that would prevent Danis from “continuing to disclose sexually explicit photographs” of Agdal without her permission.
In response, Danis’ attorneys filed a response on Monday denies many of the allegations against him with his lawyers stating in others that “defendant lacks sufficient information to admit or deny the allegations.”
At the end of the 16-page rebuttal to the latest complaint filed against Danis, his attorneys argued that the court “should enter judgment against [Agdal] and in favor of [Danis] on all counts of the complaint.”
In closing, both Agdal and Danis issued the same ultimatum with demands for “a trial by jury for all issues so triable.”
Judge Michael Hammer also ordered Danis to comply with requests from Agdal’s attorneys to provide “supplemental interrogatories” no later than Dec. 1 after he already missed a previous deadline.
Among the unanswered requests include Danis providing the identities of certain individuals that he communicated about Agdal primarily through Twitter direct messages as well as information about videos Danis posted from his Twitter account.
Another request is Danis identifying the individual he communicated with on Twitter, which Agdal’s lawyers argue happened in the “exact timeframe” that he posted a video to Twitter “that had been hacked from her Snapchat account.”
The next step in the lawsuit happens on Dec. 18 with a telephone conference scheduled between both parties and the court.
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