Jane Doe 2βone of the women currently suing popular country music singer Jimmie Allen for battery, sexual assault, invasion of privacy and emotional distressβis fighting back against the countersuit he filed against her, filing a motion on Thursday to get that suit dropped completely.
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According to People, Jane 2's argument is that Allen doesnβt really have a claim against her because what she did doesnβt constitute the βconversionβ claims that Allenβs team have alleged. For context, Jane 2 allegations against the βBest Shotβ singer stem from an alleged sexual assault encounter that took place in a Las Vegas hotel room and was recorded on his cellphone without her consentβeven thought the singerβs lawyers are arguing that the recording and the sexual act was consensual. Theyβve since accused Jane 2 of ββconversion,β a civil tort similar to theft that involves someone taking property that doesnβt belong to themβ in their countersuit.
Jane 2 lawyers have said that even if their client took the phone as Allenβs lawyerβs said, βit was in order to turn it over to the police as evidence of a crime,β and that βtaking disputed property for the purpose of turning it over to the courts or law enforcement for investigation or adjudication is not theft.β
βAllowing a perpetrator to sue a crime victim who turns evidence over to the police for conversion would violate the Nevada Constitution and public policy,β the filing read with Jane 2 later adding that that filing the countersuit is entertainerβs βattempt to harass and intimidate herβ for reporting him to the authorities.
Allenβs legal team has since responded to the news of the motion to dismiss his countersuit, saying in a statement:
βWe will leave it to the court to determine if taking something without permission is conversion (or stealing)βa lesson that most of us learned when we were young. The facts here donβt support what Jane Doe 2 is claiming, and we look forward to the legal process moving forward and clearing Jimmieβs name.β
This is just one of two women that Allen is countersuing. As previously, reported by The Root, Jane Doe 1βwho has been indeitified only as his former managerβalleged that Allen repeatedly sexually abused her for 18 months after she began working for him in April 2020. Sheβs suing him for βsexual battery, assault, false imprisonment, sex trafficking and emotional distress.β Sheβs also suing Allenβs management company, Wide Open Music, and its founder, Ash Bowersβthe latter of whom she claimed let her go from her position not too long after she came forward with her allegations against Allen to himβfor βgross negligence and participating in a venture engaged in sex trafficking, among other counts.β
Allen has denied any wrongdoing in both cases and recently announced a new comedy tour in the aftermath since the allegations came to light.
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