The judge ruled that Justin Baldoni can access Taylor Swift & Blake Lively’s texts

Back in May, there were some crazy rumors and stories flying around about Blake Lively and Taylor Swift. Justin Baldoni’s lawyer claimed that they had it on good authority that Blake tried to convince Taylor to delete emails or texts having to do with It Ends with Us. Blake’s lawyers fought back in court, arguing that Taylor wasn’t part of the situation whatsoever. Taylor’s lawyers also got involved and it was chaotic for a second. Then Baldoni’s lawyers dropped their documents subpoena, a bizarre move given everything they said in court. Deadline reported that “Part of the reason the summons was dropped was because details that the Bryan Freedman-represented Baldoni and crew sought were provided, I hear.” As in, Taylor and her team turned over everything Team Baldoni wanted. Well, last week, Blake’s team went to court to say that Team Baldoni should not have access to any of the communications between Swift and Lively. The judge said… not so fast.

A judge ruled Wednesday that Justin Baldoni can obtain messages between Blake Lively and Taylor Swift that pertain to “It Ends With Us” and the legal melee between the film’s co-stars. Lively had asked Judge Lewis Liman to prevent Baldoni from obtaining such messages, arguing that Baldoni was dragging Swift into the conflict as part of a public relations strategy.

But in his order on Wednesday, Liman found that such messages may be relevant to the case, and that a protective order is in place to prevent them from leaking to the press.

“A motion or request may be, and in this case often has been, both a legitimate litigation tactic and an attempt to maneuver in the broader court of public opinion,” the judge wrote.

Baldoni’s team previously subpoenaed Swift and her attorneys. At the time, Swift’s spokesman issued a statement saying that Swift had nothing to do with the film beyond licensing a song, and had not even seen it until weeks after its release. Swift’s team moved to quash the subpoenas, and Baldoni’s side withdrew them. Lively’s team then sought to close off the issue once and for all, arguing that Swift is irrelevant to the case. But the judge was not persuaded of that.

“Given that Lively has represented that Swift had knowledge of complaints or discussions about the working environment on the film, among other issues, the requests for messages with Swift regarding the film and this action are reasonably tailored to discover information that would prove or disprove Lively’s harassment and retaliation claims,” the judge wrote.

[From Variety]

I agree with the judge’s ruling here – the communications are absolutely relevant. It feels like they’re even more relevant to the case because of the outsized focus on the documents and whether Baldoni’s team can have access to them. I’d really like to know if Deadline’s source was correct last month as well, and that Taylor’s people turned over documents to Baldoni’s side and that’s why Baldoni withdrew the summons. Hm.

Photos courtesy of Avalon Red, Backgrid.

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9 Responses to “The judge ruled that Justin Baldoni can access Taylor Swift & Blake Lively’s texts”

  1. Anne says:

    Good. I’m glad he’s getting the texts between the two, If Blake conspired in the texts, he deserves to know.

    • jmbeans says:

      I’m wondering if Blake texted anything about finding Baldoni attractive… also any hints at trying to undermine him as director. But mostly if she found him hot, because some of her messages to Baldoni…guuurrrrlllll.

  2. Becks1 says:

    i think this line from the judge is really good given all this back and forth:

    “A motion or request may be, and in this case often has been, both a legitimate litigation tactic and an attempt to maneuver in the broader court of public opinion.”

    I see a lot of people on here in these posts saying that either Blake or Justin is doing something in the court (filing something, requesting a subpoena etc) just as a PR move. But both things can be true (and often are) – that something can be a PR move AND can also be a “legitimate litigation tactic.” and I think that’s what’s going on here.

    • Kitten says:

      Yes Becks, I think that’s absolutely true and I do think they’re clearly BOTH waging a PR war in addition to fighting in court.
      I just think Baldoni is doing it on a much larger scale, employing people who are the architects of some of the most famously destructive and dirty PR campaigns against other celebs, most of whom are women. Given the fact that he’s built a career off of a public persona as an “ally to all women” it all feels really gross and disingenuous to me. Like, I don’t blame the guy for defending himself against accusations that may be untrue but I do blame him for employing classic Depp adversarial tactics like bot farms etc.

  3. ariel says:

    Remember, his lawsuit against Blake (and the NY Times) has been completely dismissed, mostly with prejudice.
    And in the long dismissal order/opinion, there is note that the Swift attorneys had not given them anything at the time.

    He could have gotten the same texts from Lively, but bringing swift’s name in allowed him to sully Lively, which is his only real goal, punishing a woman for daring to speak out about him being gross.
    But Swift being Swift, i am guessing the contents of the text messages will require to be filed under seal (not part of the public record)- if they are filed (discovery documents are generally exchanged between counsel, not entered into the court record unless they end up as exhibits to motions or depositions or at trial).

    B/c baldoni is trying his “case” for the headlines, public opinion, and easily accessible societal misogyny, Ms Swift will likely want to keep him from leaking her texts.

    Every time she makes a face in public, it is analyzed 1000 ways for as many days- she guards her private life, as she needs to, to maintain her privacy and her sanity.

  4. Joanne says:

    Whoever convinced Blake Lively that she doesn’t need a stylist did her wrong.

  5. Lizzie says:

    The PR battle is being waged by both sides. Don’t forget, Lively hired Nick Shapiro, a former CIA deputy chief of staff and senior advisor to ex-director John Brennan.

  6. jesse says:

    The guy asked her if she and her husband climaxed simultaneously and then spent $90k on a preemptive astroturfing campaign. But sure, it’s Blake’s fault and ex-CIA and Taylor’s texts. We don’t like Blake so let’s two sides this.

    • ariel says:

      It is maddening, and seriously depressing how easily we as a society rush to blame women for not being perfect, likeable, obedient, that somehow invalidate their claims of sexual harassment.

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