Representatives for Ye are mounting a vigorous rebuttal to the assault and trafficking allegations made by his former assistant, Lauren Pisciotta. In a statement provided to Complex, a Yeezy spokesperson criticized Pisciotta’s amended complaint as “the fourth version she has advanced,” claiming that “each new revision contradicts the others; each is more absurd and outlandish than all previous claims combined.”
The spokesperson continued, “Does Ms. Pisciotta actually believe her confabulations? We cannot know. But this breathless new installment of fantasy fiction discredits all past, present, and future testimony.”
The Yeezy camp made it clear that the legal arena is no place for what they deem “delusions and mental disturbances.” They asserted their readiness “to annihilate Ms. Pisciotta’s tall tales before a jury, an exoneration so inevitable that even she, lost in her fog of fantasy, must surely see it coming.”
Additionally, Milo Yiannopoulos, speaking for Ye and his family, described Pisciotta’s claims as “self-evident” in their “absurdity.” He remarked, “[S]he picked the one rapper who loathes violence, has never been arrested, and doesn’t even own a gun.” He also blasted her alleged motivations: “An extortionist of Ms. Pisciotta’s vaulting ambition ought to choose her victims more wisely.”
Yiannopoulos further branded her a “fantasist,” accusing her of once “demanded” a diamond-encrusted crocodile Hermès Birkin bag “in exchange for a single act of fellatio.”
Pisciotta’s amended complaint, filed July 8th, accuses Ye of an array of serious misconduct, including sexual harassment, assault, battery, sex trafficking, false imprisonment, and emotional abuse, during her employment from roughly July 2021 to October 2022. She alleges oral rape and attempted vaginal penetration and states she moved to Florida to escape his behavior, though harassment allegedly continued, including being swatted.
Her attorney, Arick Fudali of the Bloom Firm, emphasized that Ye’s own social media comments, such as admitting he has “hit women before,” are unusual in ongoing litigation. Fudali commented, “I have never, in my entire career of representing alleged victims, seen a defendant tweet out admissions to the case in the middle of litigation and discovery. This is absolutely a new one.”
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