Judge Rules on Taylor Swift Deposition in ‘It Ends โwith Us’ Legal Battle
NEW YORK – A judge is weighing whether Taylor Swift will be required to testify in the โคongoing legal dispute between actor Justin Baldoni and actress Blake lively, according to court documents obtained by CNN Friday. The case stems from allegations made duringโ and after the production of โฃthe โfilm “It Ends With us.”
The dispute โoriginated with a lawsuit filed by Baldoni against Lively and her husband, Ryan Reynolds, which was later dismissed.lively is continuing to pursue claims of sexual harassment and โคretaliation against Baldoni. Swift became involved when text exchanges referencing aโข “Taylor” surfaced as part of Baldoni’s dismissed โขcountersuit.
Lively’s attorneys have accused Baldoni’s legal team of seekingโ media attention by โฃinvolving Swift, stating in a recent filing, “The โฃWayfarer Defendants have repeatedly sought to bring Ms. Swiftโข into this litigation to fuel their relentless media strategy.” The filing further alleges that Baldoni’s โteam did not contact Swift’s โขcounsel regarding a deposition date until earlierโข this week and criticized their “lack of diligence, and disrespect for Ms. swift’s privacy and schedule.” Baldoni’s team has reportedly suggested Swift might potentially be available forโค a deposition betweenโข October 20-25.
Swift was initially subpoenaed in May but the request was later withdrawn. A spokesperson forโ Swift clarified at the time that swift “never set foot on the set of this movie,” and had limited involvement,only “permitting the use of oneโ song,’My Tears Ricochet.'” The spokesperson added that theโข subpoena was “designed โคto use Taylor Swift’sโฃ name to draw public interest by creating tabloid clickbait instead ofโฃ focusing on the facts of theโค case.”
One text message revealed during the legal proceedings showed โคBaldoni writing to Lively, “I really love whatโข you did. It really does help a lotโฆ (And I would have felt that way โwithout Ryan and Taylor).”
A trialโ is currently scheduled for next spring in federal court in New York.