Country star Jimmie Allen is countersuing two women who have accused him of sexual assault.
In documents filed in Nashville federal court, Allen responded to a pair of lawsuits that accuse the rising country star of sexual assault. Following the accusations, record label BBR Music Group dropped Allen, and the star was also removed from festival lineups.
The first case claims he repeatedly assaulted an unnamed “Jane Doe” on his management team; the second claims he assaulted another woman in a Las Vegas hotel room and secretly recorded it.
Allen’s lawyers have countersued each accuser and are seeking unspecified monetary damages. In the case of Allen’s former day-to-day manager, the attorneys claim that she defamed him by making “deliberate, intentional, malicious, and willful” statements to Variety beyond what is included in the lawsuit. Variety broke the news of her lawsuit in early May.
“Throughout the Variety article, Jane Doe made several untruthful statements which painted Allen and Doe’s consensual affair as nonconsensual sexual misconduct,” his lawyers claim. “Allen’s reputation and relationships within the entertainment industry have also been severely damaged as a result Jane Doe’s statements in the Variety article.”
In responding to the second lawsuit, in which the woman claims that Allen filmed their sexual encounter, his lawyers say that she had explicitly consented to the recording and that she then unfairly took his phone with her when she left the hotel. In technical terms, they accuse her of “conversion,” a civil tort similar to theft that involves someone taking property that doesn’t belong to them.
“By taking his camera phone without permission, Jane Doe 2 wrongfully exerted a distinct act of dominion over Allen’s personal property,” his lawyers write.
(Photo: Shea Flynn)
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